Four Japanese bike makers have launched a battery swapping company

Honda, Kawasaki, Suzuki & Yamaha form joint battery-swapping company for EVs

By Balakumar published 24 hours ago: 
https://www.techradar.com/in/news/honda-kawasaki-suzuki-and-yamaha-form-joint-battery-swapping-company-for-evs


Four Japanese bike makers have launched a battery swapping company

It's named Gachaco.

Japan’s big four motorcycle companies - Honda, Kawasaki, Suzuki, and Yamaha - 
have come together to form an entity that will standardise swappable batteries 
for electric powered vehicles.

Along with Japanese petroleum company Eneos, the Japanese bike majors are 
forming a new company called Gachaco, which will not only standardise swappable 
batteries for electric two-wheelers but will also develop appropriate 
infrastructure to support the service.

Similar to Gogoro in Taiwan

In March 2021, the four firms had agreed on a single EV standard that their 
swappable batteries should meet.

In November 2021, Honda took the lead and unveiled its new Mobile Power Pack.

The Gachaco battery swapping system will use the Mobile Power Pack from Honda 
and launch battery exchange stations for electric motorcycles and mopeds in 
Tokyo.

Other major Japanese cities will also get the battery exchange stations before 
the year ends at convenient, centralised places, including railway stations and 
Eneos service stations.

Expended batteries that have reached the end of service life for EVs will be 
collected and reviewed by Eneos for re-use before being recycled.

Gachaco is likely to follow the EV battery swapping model established by Gogoro 
in Taiwan.


No detail has been given about Gachaco’s plans for international expansion.

But Honda has said it has been conducting demonstration testing of battery 
sharing for electric tricycle taxies in India. Honda will begin a battery 
sharing service in India, using the MPP e: in the first half of 2022.

The lack of common specification for a swappable electric motorcycle battery is 
seen as one of the hurdles to the widespread adoption of small EVs.

If battery swapping is standardised, much like charging plugs for our 
electronic devices, things can get considerably easier for both EVs companies 
and customers.

And it’s good that big companies have taken a lead in that direction.


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