{"id":8542,"date":"2020-12-29T09:00:59","date_gmt":"2020-12-29T09:00:59","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/?p=8542"},"modified":"2020-12-22T17:18:27","modified_gmt":"2020-12-22T17:18:27","slug":"the-european-battery-industry-on-track-for-battery-market-leadership","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.innovationnewsnetwork.com\/the-european-battery-industry-on-track-for-battery-market-leadership\/8542\/","title":{"rendered":"The European battery industry: on track for battery market leadership"},"content":{"rendered":"

The Advanced Rechargeable & Lithium Batteries Association (RECHARGE) outline some of the barriers, and their solutions, to achieving the vision of a prosperous and sustainable economy driven by strategic value chains such as the battery industry.<\/h2>\n

Speaking during the launch of the European Raw Materials Alliance<\/a> earlier this autumn, European Commission Vice-President Maro\u0161 \u0160ef\u010dovi\u010d announced that investment in the European battery ecosystem reached \u20ac60bn, three times more than in China. And, indeed, never ever has the European continent seen a faster development of the domestic battery value chain than in the past 24 months. Since the launch of the European Battery Alliance (EBA) at the end of 2017, Europe has developed from a conventional and niche battery cell manufacturing hub to a serious candidate for taking global leadership in advanced rechargeable battery technology. The Commission has made Europe\u2019s battery objective very clear: become the second largest manufacturer of lithium-ion battery cells \u2013 the dominant battery chemistry in electric mobility, electronics and battery energy storage systems \u2013 and overtake the US and the rest of Asia1 <\/sup>by 2024, at the latest.<\/p>\n

Advanced rechargeable batteries<\/a>, such as lithium-based or next-generation nickel, zinc, sodium, or solid-state battery chemistries, are a key enabler for the transition towards low-emission mobility and decarbonised energy generation. Without them, the target of a climate-neutral economy by 2050 and the 2\u00b0C Paris Agreement goal cannot conceivably be reached.<\/p>\n

It is, indeed, an increasing awareness of global warming and rising populations that have driven the development of battery storage\/power in Europe to date. For years, growing cities and soaring CO2 emissions have pushed for alternative mobility and green electricity solutions.<\/p>\n

Batteries\u2019 applications in the automotive, industrial vehicles, and energy sectors are key tools for the aspired green transition. In the transport sector, the hybridisation and electrification of vehicles reduce CO2 emissions, while the use of batteries in industrial vehicles supports both decarbonisation and noise reduction. In the energy sector, batteries are necessary to store renewable energy and contribute to the stability of the electrical grid. Moreover, batteries power everyday applications such as smartphones, tablets, power tools, and robots, and have become a significant job engine for millions of people around the world.<\/p>\n

Large-scale electrification with batteries<\/h3>\n

Once bound to consumer equipment, toys, and starting-lighting-ignition (SLI), batteries have now made their way into smart electronics, robots, electric mobility, and renewables-based energy generation. In particular, the uptake of batteries in electric vehicles (EVs) \u2013 be them cars, buses, trucks, or bikes \u2013 has fuelled the tremendous market growth of batteries in recent years.<\/p>\n

In 2012, about a dozen EV car models were marketed in Europe. Eight years later, nearly a hundred different models from all relevant car manufacturers are being sold to an increasing customer base, and it is expected that some 250 new models will be added to the European car fleet by 2025 alone. A recent market study by Avicenne Energy predicts that carmakers will invest about \u20ac300bn in electric vehicles by 2030. Over 250 million battery-powered cars are expected to be driving on Europe\u2019s roads by 2050, according to the European Commission.<\/p>\n

Cost reduction<\/h3>\n

Another driver for the rising demand for batteries has been cost reduction. The cost curve for lithium-based battery cells has developed from US$1,000\/kWh in 2010 down to US$200\/kWh in 2016. Today, four years later, lithium-ion cells are in the range of about US$100\/kWh. Falling costs and falling prices have affected both the EV as well as electronics and battery energy storage markets. The latter particularly benefits from important spill-over effects.<\/p>\n

Most relevant to the development of the European battery market has been the new political mindset developed under the European Battery Alliance, triggering the Commission\u2019s Strategic Action Plan on Batteries and a major remodelling of the European vision of a prosperous and sustainable economy driven by strategic value chains such as the battery industry. With the goal of establishing a competitive battery ecosystem based on innovative, sustainable, and competitive batteries in Europe, the Commission set the course for:<\/p>\n