http://www.greencarreports.com/news/1083392_cheaper-electric-car-batteries-slow-steady-wins-the-race
[image] Slow & Steady Wins The Race
By John Voelcker  Apr 5 2013

[image  
http://images.thecarconnection.com/lrg/historical-prices-specific-energy-trends-for-li-ion-batteries-duke-university-2009_100424516_l.jpg
Historical Prices & Specific Energy Trends for Li-Ion Batteries (Duke
University, 2009)

http://images.thecarconnection.com/sml/2011-nissan-leaf_100345418_s.jpg
Lithium-ion battery pack of 2011 Nissan Leaf, showing cells assembled into
modules
]

Did your parents ever tell you, "Slow and steady wins the race"?

It can be annoying to hear as a child, but often it's true--and in the case
of electric car batteries, it's how they'll get less expensive.

As a new posting from the Washington Post's Wonkblog points out, there is no
Moore's Law for batteries.

That's the law underlying the rapid improvement of consumer electronics like
mobile phones and computers, which says the number of transistors in a
microelectronic device roughly doubles every 18 months.

Run that rate over many years, and you get order-of-magnitude improvements
in performance or better from decade to decade.

The post cites a recent National Academy of Sciences study, which concludes:
"Scientists and battery experts, who have been optimistic in the recent past
about improving lithium-ion batteries and about developing new battery
chemistries—lithium/air and lithium/sulfur are the leading candidates—are
considerably less optimistic now."

We haven't seen quite such pessimism in our interviews with battery experts,
both from cell fabrication companies and automakers.

Instead, there's a broad consensus that electric-car batteries of any given
chemistry will make slow, incremental improvements in performance from minor
improvements to their chemistry and better manufacturing techniques.

We wrote last year that the rate of improvement in large-format lithium-ion
cells, the kind used in electric cars, is likely to mirror that of small
format cells since 1989: 6 to 8 percent a year.

That rate is depicted, more or less, in a chart from a 2009 study done at
Duke University.

And there's still huge room for improvement in existing battery costs simply
due to economies of scale as the number of plug-in electric cars built
rises.

Last year, there were roughly 53,000 plug-in cars sold in the U.S. and,
according to analysts, a total of more than 100,000 globally.

With the exception of the highest-volume vehicles--currently the Nissan
Leaf, at 50,000 after two years and counting--and the Chevrolet Volt, most
plug-ins don't use large enough numbers of cells to justify truly efficient
high-volume manufacturing.

But take that total to 1 million vehicles or so in a few years, and there
will be enough volume for the largest cell makers to operate at a more
efficient level.

Automakers will likely use some of the improvement to fit larger battery
packs for longer range, trading off cost reduction and range increases.

Meanwhile, analysts have revised their estimates of future battery costs
downward.

As the Wonkblog post notes, McKinsey & Company released a 2012 analysis that
"predicted that the price for lithium-ion batteries could fall by as much as
two-thirds by 2020...to around $200 per kilowatt-hour."

The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, in turn, estimates that a new
gasoline-powered car in 2025 will cost $3,000 more in real dollars than it
did in 2012, due to the cost of new technologies to meet strict corporate
average fuel economy rules.

The automakers we've talked to consider that estimate to be a best-case
scenario. Some have said they feel the real cost could be as high as twice
that number.

So with battery prices falling--slowly but steadily--and conventional cars
getting more expensive, there's likely to come a tipping point for
electric-car adoption.
[© 2013 Green Car Reports  All Rights Reserved]




For all EVLN posts use:
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/template/NamlServlet.jtp?macro=search_page&node=413529&query=evln&sort=date

Here are today's archive-only EV posts:

EVLN: Ford Focus Electric Added To Panama Canal Authority Fleet
EVLN: Hertz UK renting & sharing i-MiEV EVs
EVLN: Mahindra Verito Electric sedan launch in 2014, Electric-SUV R&D
EVLN: How To Drive A Tesla-S in the Ice And Snow (video)
+
EVLN: AMG Cigarrette e-superboat & M-Benz SLS e-supercar @Miami Show


{brucedp.150m.com}



--
View this message in context: 
http://electric-vehicle-discussion-list.413529.n4.nabble.com/EVLN-Li-ion-kW-kg-Wh-are-incrementally-improving-over-time-tp4662353.html
Sent from the Electric Vehicle Discussion List mailing list archive at 
Nabble.com.
_______________________________________________
UNSUBSCRIBE: http://www.evdl.org/help/index.html#usub
http://lists.evdl.org/listinfo.cgi/ev-evdl.org
For EV drag racing discussion, please use NEDRA 
(http://groups.yahoo.com/group/NEDRA)

Reply via email to