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UK startup Volklec to make EV batteries with licensed Chinese technology
UK startup Volklec to make EV batteries with licensed Chinese technology

Reuters

time26-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • Reuters

UK startup Volklec to make EV batteries with licensed Chinese technology

LONDON, Feb 26 (Reuters) - British startup Volklec has reached a licensing agreement with China's Far East Battery (FEB) to use its technology to make batteries for energy storage and electric vehicles, it said on Wednesday. FEB, a unit of Far East Smarter Energy Co ( opens new tab, will also provide engineers and other support to help Volklec scale up production at the UK Battery Industrialisation Centre (UKBIC), a partly government-funded battery factory in Coventry. The Chinese company will also provide Volklec with access to its supply chain to lower costs. European battery makers have struggled with the challenges of developing a viable chemistry for EV batteries while also raising funds and scaling up in an industry dominated by China. After prominent failures like Britishvolt and Sweden's Northvolt, which is undergoing restructuring, industry experts predict more European battery firms will need Chinese cash and expertise to scale up. Volklec said in late 2025 it will start producing "energy cell" batteries for e-scooters, e-bikes and EV chargers as well as energy storage, with a "power cell" for EVs coming in the second half of 2026. UK investment company Frontive Group has committed 20 million pounds ($25.3 million) for production of the energy cell. Volklec executive director Phil Popham told Reuters the company will need to raise 80 million pounds for a new 1 gigawatt hour (GWh) production line at the UKBIC for the power cell. Volklec is talking to a number of automakers about using the cells, he said, declining to disclose which companies. Popham said FEB has supplied cells for about a million EVs so far. "Volklec's approach is all about getting to market quickly using proven technology to give confidence to customers and investors," Popham said. "We know where we're going to buy it, where we'll produce it and what we'll produce."

UK battery firm says it has learned from others' errors as it licenses Chinese tech
UK battery firm says it has learned from others' errors as it licenses Chinese tech

The Guardian

time26-02-2025

  • Automotive
  • The Guardian

UK battery firm says it has learned from others' errors as it licenses Chinese tech

A startup has said it has learned from Britain's faltering attempts to manufacture batteries for electric vehicles, as it signed a deal to license technology from an established Chinese firm. Coventry-based Volklec plans to manufacture batteries for cars, boats, construction vehicles and aircraft using technology from China's Far East Battery (FEB), a maker of batteries mainly for electric bikes. Volklec has appointed former Lotus Cars chief executive Phil Popham as executive director to lead its efforts. Popham said the company would take a low-risk approach to avoid problems that have hampered other British attempts to build EV batteries at scale. The startup will aim to start producing batteries this year at the UK Battery Industrialisation Centre (UKBIC), a part government-funded research centre in the West Midlands. It will then find a site to build a factory making batteries with a cumulative capacity of 10 gigawatt hours (GWh) a year. The UK has struggled to attract investment in battery manufacturing. There are two companies with 'gigafactories' in the UK: the Chinese-owned AESC, which supplies Nissan's Sunderland factory from a site next door, and Agratas, owned by the Indian conglomerate Tata, which is building a factory in Somerset to supply batteries to JLR, the maker of Jaguar and Land Rover cars. Those factories are aimed at producing batteries with total capacities of 38GWh and 40GWh respectively – enough for hundreds of thousands of cars apiece. However, Popham said there was a need for a UK battery company to supply other businesses that did not have enough demand for a gigafactory on their own. 'We believe there is a robust market for an independent British manufacturer,' he said. The partnership would make Volklec dependent on its Chinese partner at a time of increased geopolitical tensions, although the UK chancellor, Rachel Reeves, has sought investment from China to help meet growth targets. Several prominent British automotive startups have shown promise before crashing into bankruptcy, including the bankrupt van maker Arrival and the failed battery startup Britishvolt. An effort to attract a battery company to Coventry airport has so far failed. Imran Khatri, the co-owner of Volklec along with his brother, Sameer, was previously an investor in Britishvolt. Popham said Volklec would learn from other companies' mistakes, taking a 'phased' approach that 'takes out as much of the risk as possible'. Sign up to Business Today Get set for the working day – we'll point you to all the business news and analysis you need every morning after newsletter promotion 'Those companies that haven't been successful, it's because they tried to get to our stage three, rather than our stage one,' Popham said. It will use FEB's technology, will bring in its technicians to mirror the manufacturing processes used in China, and will buy materials from its suppliers at the cost available to a larger company. 'The combination of the two [companies] gave us a fast route to market at low risk, at modest investment,' said Popham. 'Battery manufacturing is complex. The engineering is complex. It takes time, and it takes investment,' he added. The first phase will involve making 100 megawatt hours of batteries on UKBIC's existing lines, before using spare space to produce another 1GWh of batteries there by the end of 2026. That 'springboard into a gigafactory' will cost about £100m, with £20m committed from the Khatris, Popham said. The 10GWh phase would take about £1bn in investment, and at least five years.

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