LG Chem, a major South Korean lithium-ion battery manufacturer, is increasing its cell manufacturing capacity to such an extent that it may surpass the entire LIB market in both output and raw material consumption from just three years ago.
Roskill, industry analysts that ran the numbers on LG Chem’s planned output, says that South Korean manufacturer plans to increase capacity to 90GWh in 2020 from a previous forecast of 70GWh.
“Assuming 100% of output was to be NMC532, 90GWh would require around 100kt of cathode, containing 40kt nickel, 22kt cobalt, 16kt manganese and 50kt lithium (carbonate equivalent), and 90kt of anode materials which could be 100% graphite,” writes Roskill.
“If producing at capacity, LG Chem’s LIB output and raw material consumption would be greater than the entire LIB market in 2015.”
LG Chem, South Korea’s largest chemical company, is one of the top five LIB manufacturers. It makes batteries for the Ford Focus, Chevrolet Volt and Renault ZOE.
LG Chem has been making deals to ensure it has raw material. This past spring Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt and LG Chem announced they are planning a cathode material facilities with capacity of 40,000tpy and 100,000tpy capacity planned for future. It also signed deals other raw material deals with Nemaska Lithium and Ganfeng Lithium.
While cobalt and lithium prices are currently falling, Roskills says cell manufacturers are locking in supply and “. . . that activity in the sector continues at a rapid pace.”
Creative Commons image of eclipse courtesy of Dave Pape.
Comments
Patrick Mckowen
How much of an impact will this have on the pricing by then?
Cheers, Patrick