WhiteLeaff
Posts: 825 +1,595
I have no idea what you are talking about, CATL is a battery manufacturer, they have continuously lowered prices and maintained profitability and very high investments in expansion and R&D. They are not going to suddenly raise prices in the midst of fierce competition with other manufacturers. the problem in the accident in my view is that there is no competition, this gives freedom for this to happen:A) Any R&D spent in lowering the cost of individual batteries has to be repaid at some point because R&D money has to come from somewhere.
B) The real battery problem is their energy density. Adding batteries currently adds enough weight that you then have to add even more batteries to haul that weight around.
If tomorrow a new battery type could hold 10X the energy and recharge 20X as fast at the same size, weight, and cost, WAY MORE people would be interested in EVs (and they could be made cheaper than today's and handle better too)
(Props on the graph inclusion in your comment!)
"In some foreign showrooms, BYD charges more than double — sometimes nearly triple — the price it gets for three key models in China, according to a Reuters review of the automaker’s pricing in five of its biggest export markets.
Take the BYD Atto 3, a compact electric crossover. In China, the midrange version sells for $19,283. In Germany, the little SUV is priced at $42,789 — a price that’s still competitive with comparable electric vehicles in that market.
The differential, in part, reflects cutthroat competition in China, the world’s largest auto market, where dozens of EV brands are waging a price war. BYD’s entry-level Seagull electric hatchback sells for less than $10,000 at home"
Why BYD’s EV exports sell for twice the China price
By Nick Carey and Ben Klayman LONDON (Reuters) - U.S. and European politicians have raised alarms that their domestic auto industries could be destroyed by a wave of cheap Chinese electric vehicles. But so far, China's top EV maker, BYD, has dramat...
