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The Dawn of the 1000 km battery.

[b][big]China's 'condensed' battery breakthrough could power long-range electric cars and planes, and will be in mass production later this year
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One thousand kilometres on a single charge sounds like the stuff electric motoring dreams are made of, but it could become reality after the world’s biggest EV battery maker announced a technological breakthrough slated for mass production this year.

China-based Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited (CATL) claims that, pound-for-pound, its new ‘condensed’ battery can store almost double the power of Tesla’s top-of-the-range 4680 cell, itself hailed a game-changer mere months ago with its reported range of 450km (279 miles).

As well as opening up the possibility of long distance motoring without the need to stop for a top-up, CATL says it shatters the technological barriers hampering development of electric-powered passenger flight.

EV range has quadrupled in the last decade as the battery industry gears up to meet the accelerating switch to electric. Given that most motorists rarely need a range of 1,000km (621 miles), the innovation could translate to smaller batteries and cheaper EVs.

CATL realised its breakthrough by developing a semisolid-state battery using partially solid electrolytes, which gives it greater energy density over the usual liquid or gel electrolytes in today’s lithium ion batteries.

The company – which makes a third of the world’s EV batteries – said in a statement: “The launch of condensed batteries will usher in an era of universal electrification of sea, land and air transportation.”

This will usher in an era of universal electrification of sea, land and air transportation

In a further sign of exciting progress in the sector, a Volkswagen-backed rival is already snapping at its heels having announced plans to bring a 1,000kmrange battery to the mass market.

Gotion High Tech, also based in China, says its lithium-manganese-iron-phosphate ‘Astroinno’ battery will begin mass production in 2024.

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helenS · 36-40, F
People should stop using cars if they take the environment seriously. Cars will never be environmental-friendly. They ruin cities which were once beautiful and worth living in, and they ruin the planet. Of course, production of billions of batteries leads to child labor and slave labor in countries such as Congo.
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Lhayezee · 26-30, F
@helenS With decent (ie frequent and inexpensive) public transport, plus arguably uber/etc, no one needs a car.

Which is hypocritical of me because I hate the uber model, just the idea of a constantly circulating group of cars all communicating to each other to pick up passengers means we can turn car parks into park-parks as well.
helenS · 36-40, F
@Lhayezee What really sickens me is that people use their car to drive to the drugstore which is just a 3-minute-walk away. It takes even longer to get there by car than to walk. They can't even remember what their feet are for.
Lhayezee · 26-30, F
@helenS Not to hate on some countries (ok, the US :P ), but redesigning cities around cars and not walking was just about the stupidest thing ever done
SW-User
@helenS Although child labor does exist in Congo (and it's tragic), the cobalt they mine is not only used for batteries. It's also used to make the rechargeable batteries in phones, tablets, and laptops.

It's still unacceptable, though, which is why Tesla, BMW, and other companies have started to use ethically sourced cobalt from areas outside of the DRC.
SW-User
@helenS But God help you if you try to make people walk...

helenS · 36-40, F
@SW-User European cities were destroyed to make them "car-friendly" in the 1960's and 1970's mainly. It's very difficult to make those cities people-friendly again.
SW-User
@helenS Yup! The pushback in the form of 15-minute city conspiracy crap is simply the fear of withdrawal symptoms.