One of our readers, Peter Egan, recently passed along this automotive lithium-ion battery supply chain report. It’s an interesting report that goes a bit deeper into the lithium-ion battery market than we normally dive. I pulled out 7–10 charts (depending on how you count) that I found quite interesting, and I’ve added notes about some of them in the captions.
One thought on “7–10 Lithium-Ion Battery Charts To Charge You Up”
I think those prices are way outdated. Nissan sells 24 kWh Leaf battery for $6500 retail without core charge ($5500 with core). That works out to $270/kWh including retail margins. Bolt claim of $145/kWh is TBD as to retail pricing, but I suspect it’ll be less than $200/kWh to be competitive.
Better question for me is how much it’ll be 8 years later when I may have to replace SparkEV battery; based on cell cost of ~$80/kWh and pack cost of ~$110 kWh, retail could be ~$140/kWh, making the total cost of $2660 to drive another 8 years. Well, that’s my guess anyway.
I think those prices are way outdated. Nissan sells 24 kWh Leaf battery for $6500 retail without core charge ($5500 with core). That works out to $270/kWh including retail margins. Bolt claim of $145/kWh is TBD as to retail pricing, but I suspect it’ll be less than $200/kWh to be competitive.
Better question for me is how much it’ll be 8 years later when I may have to replace SparkEV battery; based on cell cost of ~$80/kWh and pack cost of ~$110 kWh, retail could be ~$140/kWh, making the total cost of $2660 to drive another 8 years. Well, that’s my guess anyway.