Daimler, Evonik Mull Ways to Prop Up Shaky Battery Venture
Daimler AG may find a partner to help bolster its struggling battery cell venture with Germany's Evonik Industries AG unless the two companies decide to sell the venture, according to media reports.
#hybrid
Daimler AG may find a partner to help bolster its struggling battery cell venture with Germany's Evonik Industries AG unless the two companies decide to sell the venture, according to media reports.
The Dresden-based venture, Li-Tec Battery GmbH, was set up five years ago to develop lithium-ion cells for Daimler's electric vehicles. The cells are assembled into batteries by a second Daimler-Evonik venture called Deutsche Accumotive GmbH.
Daimler owns 49.9% of the former venture and 90% of the latter. The first result of the partnerships was the 17.6-kWh battery Daimler introduced last year in the electric version of its Smart ForTwo city car.
Li-Tec had hoped to achieve a breakthrough that could double or triple the power density of a lithium-ion cell by now. But that has not happened. Instead, the company's losses have grown steadily from its inception to €26 million in 2011. The venture has warned that it expects to report operating losses through 2013.
The partners hope to garner €1 billion by selling Li-Tech, though bankers tell The Wall Street Journal a lower price is more likely. But the two companies tell Bloomberg News they might opt to add a new strategic partner instead.
RELATED CONTENT
-
On Military Trucks, Euro Car Sales, Mazda Drops and More
Did you know Mack is making military dump trucks from commercial vehicles or that Ford tied with Daimler in Euro vehicle sales or the Mazda6 is soon to be a thing of the past or Alexa can be more readily integrated or about Honda’s new EV strategy? All that and more are found here.
-
Revolutionary Hydrogen Storage Tank Design Could Propel H2 Deployment
Rather than storing hydrogen in a large cylindrical tank, Noble Gas has developed a conformal system
-
On Fuel Cells, Battery Enclosures, and Lucid Air
A skateboard for fuel cells, building a better battery enclosure, what ADAS does, a big engine for boats, the curious case of lean production, what drivers think, and why Lucid is remarkable