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November 10, 2021 04:45 AM

World's auto industry now plans to invest US$515 billion on EVs, batteries

Analysis shows target has risen from US$300 billion 3 years ago

Reuters
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    VW ID4 charging web.jpg

    VW continues to lead the rest of the industry in EV and battery investment commitments through 2030 as it unveils new electric models such as the ID4.

    Global automakers are planning to spend more than half a trillion dollars (all figures in USD) on electric vehicles and batteries through 2030, according to a Reuters analysis, boosting investments aimed at luring car buyers away from fossil-fuel vehicles and meeting increasingly tough decarbonization targets.

    Less than three years ago, a similar analysis by Reuters found car companies planned to spend $300 billion on EVs and related technologies. But looming zero-carbon mandates in cities such as London and Paris and countries from Norway to China have lent additional urgency to the industry's EV-related investment commitments.

    The most recent analysis shows automakers planning to spend an estimated $515 billion over the next five to 10 years to develop and build new battery-powered vehicles and shift away from combustion engines.

    But industry executives and forecasters remain concerned that consumer demand for EVs could fall well short of aggressive targets without substantial additional incentives and even greater spending on charging infrastructure and grid capacity.

    Brian Maxim, head of global powertrain forecasting at AutoForecast Solutions, likens the growing investment commitments in vehicle electrification to the Cold War: "Once a few manufacturers announced EV programs, everyone else had to announce their own or be viewed as being left behind."

    However, he added, "this leaves a lot of vehicle manufacturers planning significant volumes for a vehicle category that has unknown consumer acceptance and will have minimal to no profit" for years.

    Reuters compiled the investment data from company statements, investor presentations and regulatory filings.

    Other surveys have come up with different spending projections. In June, consulting firm AlixPartners said auto industry investments in electric vehicles would reach $330 billion by 2025.

    In 2020, all global automakers combined spent nearly $225 billion on capital expenditures and R&D, according to AlixPartners.

    Tesla, appears to be the one company that is selling virtually every vehicle it can build and is readying new multibillion-dollar "gigafactories" near Berlin and Austin that will significantly boost its annual production capacity.

    In early November, the company was valued at $1.2 trillion, more than twice the combined value of Volkswagen Group, Toyota, Ford Motor and General Motors.

    Meanwhile, political and regulatory pressure is building on the world's automakers to begin phasing out production of fossil-fueled vehicles, including gasoline-electric hybrids, over the next 10-15 years, while ramping up output of full electric models.

    A number of countries, from Singapore to Sweden, have said they will ban sales of new combustion engine vehicles by 2030. U.S. President Joseph Biden has said he wants 40 percent to 50 percent of sales to be EVs by 2030.

    Germany's VW Group, which is still recovering financially from the diesel-emissions cheating scandal, continues to lead the rest of the industry, with more than $110 billion in EV and battery investment commitments through 2030. Those commitments, which represent more than 20 percent of the industry total, underpin VW's aggressive rollout plans for millions of EVs in Europe, China and North America over the next decade.

    VW's investments, like those of many of its rivals, are aimed at improving the range and performance of batteries and lowering the cost of EVs, as well as expanding battery and EV production across the globe, according to public data released by the companies.

    VW and fellow German automakers Daimler and BMW are planning to spend a combined $185 billion through 2030, while U.S. automakers GM and Ford expect to spend nearly $60 billion through 2025.

    Chinese automakers, led by VW and GM local partner SAIC Motor, have announced well over $100 billion in investment targets over the next decade. Japanese automakers lag far behind, with Honda, Toyota and Nissan so far publicly committing less than $40 billion combined.

    These investments do not include the tens of billions of dollars being invested in additional production capacity by the world's largest battery companies, many in cooperation with their automaker partners.

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