This will be a competence centre<\/a> of excellence and will also be responsible for the development and industrialisation of new technology. Construction will begin later this year in the Norwegian town Grimstad (which is situated approximately 20 minutes by car from the planned gigafactory).<\/p>\nMaterial Park<\/h4>\n
This will be used to develop and test active materials used in cathodes in order to reduce material costs. Sustainable materials are essential to manufacturing sustainable eco batteries. Therefore, Morrow has begun dialogues with numerous partners to establish the Material Park and has already secured areas and access to electricity.<\/p>\n
Pilot factory (approx. 600 MW)<\/h4>\n
This will be used to manufacture battery cells on a smaller scale prior to scaling towards the gigafactory. The pilot factory is also suited for both customer qualification and niche markets. The pilot factory will be co-located with the gigafactory in Southern Norway.<\/p>\n
The Morrow Recycling Centre<\/h4>\n
This is still in the early planning stage, but it will be an important part of the company\u2019s efforts to reduce its carbon footprint by enabling a closed loop.<\/p>\n
The Morrow Industrialization Center<\/h3>\n
Discussing the Morrow Industrialization Center (MIC), Terje Andersen, CEO of Morrow Batteries, has said: \u201cWith this world leading infrastructure, we will be able to conduct costumer qualification testing and accelerate the development and industrialisation of new battery technology. With the Morrow Industrialization Centre we are bridging the gap between component development, cell design, and large volume manufacturing.\u201d<\/p>\n
The Morrow Industrialization Centre will be one of the first battery industrialisation centres in the world, covering all aspects of the current Li-ion technology platform, and at the same time capable of incorporating and accelerating the industrialisation of next generation technologies. MIC is driven out of a strong customer centric focus and a need for proven scalable approaches.<\/p>\n
Progress towards the gigafactory<\/h3>\n
Immediately following the establishment of Morrow Batteries and given the company\u2019s ambition to build a battery cell factory in Southern Norway, 19 different plots of land were evaluated before Eyde Energi Park (in Arendal Municipaly) was selected as an ideal location for the battery cell production.<\/p>\n
Morrow signed a letter of intent just before Christmas (2020) with Arendal Municipality (the land owner), and by May this year this had been formalised in the form of a binding agreement \u2013 something that was unanimously supported by Arendal City Council.<\/p>\n
Morrow will start building the first module of the factory in 2023, with the production of battery cells starting in late 2024. All modules, four in total, will be completed by end of 2026 and will demand a minimum of 315 MW of electricity.<\/p>\n
The evaluation process created an enormous amount of engagement throughout the region, from suppliers, the process industry, academic institutions, and politicians. Quite quickly, Morrow had become a national example of a new, green industry based on the competitive advantages in Norway.<\/p>\n
Andersen, said: \u201cThe agreement with Arendal comes as a result of good co-operation and solid political support. Eyde Energy Park provides an ideal setup for us and meets all the fundamental requirements for a large-scale battery cell factory, such as access to green energy, infrastructure, a skilled labour force, and raw materials. We look forward to continuing our collaboration with Arendal municipality to establish the world\u2019s most sustainable Gigafactory.\u201d<\/p>\n
Once complete, this set up will constitute the \u2018Battery Coast\u2019 and will build on Morrow’s unique selling points: carbon neutrality, cost effectiveness, and a customer centric focus.<\/p>\n
Why Southern Norway?<\/h3>\n
Norway has several competitive advantages for sustainable industries such as battery production. These include:<\/p>\n
\n- It has the largest density of the process industry in Norway, meaning good access to raw materials such as aluminium, sulphur, and nickel;<\/li>\n
- Norway is already an important supplier of parts to the European automotive industry;<\/li>\n
- There is a large surplus of competitively priced renewable power from local hydro production (Morrow Batteries has already secured 315 MW for its gigafactory);<\/li>\n
- There is robust and secure infrastructure; and<\/li>\n
- Optimal logistics link directly to major European logistical hubs.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
The features listed above make Southern Norway in particular ideal for sustainable battery production. The location, which Andersen has named \u2018the Battery Coast\u2019, offers a compact solution with infrastructure in place that supports a local circular value chain based on sustainable materials and renewable energy.<\/p>\n
Together with its partners, Morrow is in the process of realising the Battery Coast. This means that Morrow, together with his partners, has a vertical integration that enables a closed loop in the value chain. Recycling and circularity throughout the process are crucial to our success.<\/p>\n
The keys to success<\/h3>\n
The market potential is indisputable. Investors are increasingly focusing on green companies and projects, and we meet all the criteria. Furthermore, together with our partners, we are on track to developing our second (LMNO) and third (solid state, based on sulphur) battery technologies.<\/p>\n
The right set of competencies and experience along with a well-established network are other aspects that are crucial for success and which Morrow has. Furthermore, we have already hired several personnel in key positions, and in the coming years will expand this to include employees with a diverse set of expertise within the battery industry.<\/p>\n
The key persons recently hired are:<\/p>\n
\n- CTO: Dr Rahul Fotedar, who joined us from Hilti Corporation, where he worked as a battery expert;<\/li>\n
- EVP Manufacturing: Dr Andreas Maier, former VP at Samsung SDI, who will relocate to Arendal from Seoul;<\/li>\n
- EVP Sales: Matthias G\u00e4nsslen comes from Samsung SDI and will also lead Morrow Batteries GmbH from Hannover;<\/li>\n
- EVP Industrialization and Business Development: Juergen Lind, former Head of Battery Development at Audi, will be responsible for realising the MIC; and<\/li>\n
- Head of R&D: Jon Fold von B\u00fclow joined us from Haldor Topsoe and will relocate to the Arendal-region from Copenhagen.<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n
Our vision for the future<\/h3>\n
Based on sustainable materials and cutting edge eco battery technology, we want to help accelerate the energy transition by manufacturing cost-effective and sustainable batteries for various segments. We will do this by being supported by a local battery value chain in Southern Norway, the Battery Coast.<\/p>\n
In addition to simply manufacturing world-leading eco batteries that are both sustainable and cost-effective, we are also creating \u2018green\u2019 jobs that support the EU’s focus on sustainable economic growth.<\/p>\n