Power Surge: Chinese Electric Car Battery Maker Charges For Global Market (reuters.com) 28
A dusty village on the outskirts of Ningde, a third-tier city in China's southeast, seems an unlikely place for the headquarters of a potential global leader in future automotive technology. Reuters writes about a promising company from China that is eyeing global expansion. From the article: Yet China's top-down industrial policy diktats - move up the value chain, clean up polluted urban skies, and shift to plug-in cars -- have Contemporary Amperex Technology Ltd poised to go from hometown hero to national champion, and beyond. China's answer to Japan's Panasonic Corp and South Korea's LG Chem Ltd has tripled its production capacity for lithium-ion car batteries in the past year to keep up with a surge in China's sales of electric cars. After a second major funding round completed in October, the company's value quadrupled to 80 billion yuan ($11.5 billion), CEO Huang Shilin said last week. CATL, which hopes to list on Beijing's over-the-counter exchange as part of plans to raise at least another 30 billion yuan by 2020, could be a dominant force globally.
Over the counter (Score:4, Interesting)
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Maybe electric cars are no good for China at the m (Score:4, Insightful)
They should focus on these power plants and on their kitchen fireplaces first.
Re: Maybe electric cars are no good for China at t (Score:2, Funny)
Experience the calming warmth of our new coal power plant..join us and be soothed.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't material to the decision making in China. What IS material is that there are either explicit (not likely) or hidden (likely) ownership interests by people in the government who stand to benefit. They will benefit if it's a scam or a bona fide export engine and will quietly squirrel the proceeds out of the country. The only people worried about dirty air in China are the impacted citizens and they don't have a shred of political power to influence the outcome.
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Or they could plan to charge from home solar, and gain multiple benefits.
I just dont understand the negative attitude to what is a logical technological change.
Re: Maybe electric cars are no good for China at t (Score:2)
Re: Maybe electric cars are no good for China at t (Score:5, Insightful)
It is not logical as long as new coal power plants are built.
Chinese coal production and consumption both peaked in 2013, and are declining.
Coal in China [wikipedia.org].
It is only logical if you ignore where the additional power comes from
Net new production is not coming from coal.
or if your place relies on renewable energy.
China is the world leader in both wind and solar.
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Perhaps because Germany is so sunny? ;-) It must be true because I heard it on Fox News!!
https://youtu.be/fe3vxu9vxAQ?t... [youtu.be]
In all seriousness, Germany's early solar efforts are impressive but China (& India) should catch & pass them within 5-10 years.
And then there's solar water heating where China has led not only Germany but ALL of the EU combined and accounts for more than 1/2 the global total.
America has long
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Some people seem to think that people/cities/companies/countries can only do one thing at a time and that problems need to be solved in a particular order because of that.
Method Acting (Score:2, Funny)
Wow, the Chinese are really taking this whole climate change conspiracy to the next level. I mean, it's obviously a scam to make America less competitive, but they seem to be wasting a lot of money trying to fool everybody.
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Let's assume someone is doing a scam, perhaps in housing. A single person in a bank or other financial institution cannot create a housing bubble but if enough people like this get together to collude then they might be able to pull it off. If other banks see this artificial housing market come along then they might get into it to make some money too. These banks outside the circle might see this as a scam, merely suspect it is a scam but can't prove it to anyone, or are oblivious to the scam. Whether t
Paid Publicity (Score:3)
No puns in the subjet title please (Score:2)
Because of the puns, I thought this was a story about some Chinese battery manufacturer which had cracked the quick charge problem (the biggest problem holding back EV battery tech today). Instead it's just another regular battery company getting funding. Thanks for wasting my time.
"Industrial policy diktats"?? (Score:3)
I don't know what a "diktat" is but it sounds very painful