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Electric Vehicles are Fueling a Change in Battery Technology and the Energy Sector

The race for better batteries is reshaping how industries store and distribute energy across entire power grids

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By Dave Tuttle · Battery TechnologyCarsDr. Dave TuttleElectric Vehicle
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Key takeaways

01

EV adoption is accelerating innovation in battery chemistry, density, and cost reduction.

02

Advances in EV batteries are being repurposed for grid-scale stationary energy storage.

03

The energy sector is being restructured around more flexible, distributed storage solutions.

This rapid growth and use of electric vehicles (EVs) is not just revolutionizing the automotive industry; it's poised to transform how we store and use energy on a grand scale. As companies like Tesla demonstrate the viability of EVs through advanced battery technology, a significant technological spillover into grid-level energy storage is beginning to unfold. This crossover could dramatically reduce costs and increase the reliability of renewable energy sources, making EVs more accessible and sustainable.

This rapid growth and use of electric vehicles (EVs) is not just revolutionizing the automotive industry; it's poised to transform how we store and use energy on a grand scale.

How will automotive battery innovations impact the future of grid storage and renewable energy integration?

Expanding on this subject for a roundtable Experts Talk discussion about the profitability of electric vehicles, Dr. Dave Tuttle, a Research Associate in the Energy Institute at the University of Texas at Austin, detailed the pivotal junction of automotive and energy technologies. He analyzed the symbiotic relationship between EV battery advancements and the broader implications for grid storage systems.

Below are five additional takeaways from Dr. Tuttle's analysis:

  • The inception of the Tesla Roadster utilized consumer-grade lithium-ion batteries, demonstrating that small-scale technology could scale up to power vehicles.
  • The automotive industry's demand for batteries drives up production volumes, which in turn lowers costs and enhances the technology's reliability and safety.
  • Technologies developed for EV batteries are being adapted for grid storage, exemplified by initiatives like GM Energy and Tesla's mega packs.
  • The energy sector could eventually surpass the automotive sector in revenue, especially as companies like Tesla and GM focus on integrating their battery technologies into grid storage solutions.
  • The broader application of EV battery technology to grid storage remains an underappreciated aspect of the energy transition, with significant potential for societal impact.
The broader application of EV battery technology to grid storage remains an underappreciated aspect of the energy transition, with significant potential for societal impact.

Dr. Tuttle's examination further reveals a critical narrative about how advancements in one industry can propel innovation and efficiency in another, highlighting a future where technology transfer is key to sustainability.

Video TranscriptExpand ↓

Can go out there with this price elasticity of getting the cost down to open up the market, but we have to educate that audience on, you know, how this is gonna work. And with that, you have the ability to now, you know, capture a broader presence, which is then gonna in turn influence other buyers to come into the market to say, yeah. It's now it on a ROI basis, it's much more affordable to go EV. I wanted to add something to Michael's, comment earlier about sort of the spillover technology effect that I think is very useful and very informative. So when the original Tesla Roadster was created, they used eighteen six fifty batteries or from laptops. So it was consumer electronics that drove lithium ion batteries to the point where you could create a viable electric car, and Tesla demonstrated that with the Roadster. It was expensive, but it was compelling. What Michael was talking about that I couldn't agree more with is the spillover between the automotive space and then grid level storage. Because when you have when you already have the battery management system that you've created a robust one for the automotive space and you're already building the supply base for automotive. There's nothing like automotive to drive up volumes, drive down cost, improve reliability, and and ensure safety. And so that will have a great spillover effect for grid level storage. There are different companies already right now exploring this. So if you go look at what's called GM Energy, actually, GM created a group, GM Energy, to do this exact thing. Elon Musk has actually said in the past that the energy business could be bigger than the automotive business for them sooner or later. So I couldn't agree more with that spillover that could be even more of a a sleeper right now that some people may not realize that's very beneficial. Once you have that technology for a car, you can go create grid level storage for it. And Tesla is doing that with mega packs right now.

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Dave Tuttle

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