Panasonic set to make electric car batteries in old TV plant
Panasonic looks to car batteries in a bid to reinvent itself
Japan’s Panasonic said on Friday it will start producing car batteries at its former television screen plant in Japan, accelerating its battery drive to meet anticipated demand for electric vehicles.
Panasonic, the exclusive battery cell supplier for Tesla’s mass-market Model 3, is reinventing itself as a provider of advanced car parts to escape the price competition of smartphones and other lower-margin consumer products.
The new battery production will start at its LCD plant in Himeji, western Japan, in the financial year from April 2019, using space left vacant after it closed its unprofitable TV screen manufacturing business last year.
The company declined to comment on the size of new investment or the production capacity of the new line.
The Himeji plant currently produces screens for vehicle dashboards and medical equipment, but output has dropped significantly after it exited TV screen production.
Panasonic sees batteries as a key driver for its plan to nearly double its car business revenue to 2.5 trillion yen (£16bn) in the year through March 2022.
Already one of the leading suppliers of car lithium ion batteries, it currently has five production sites in Japan.
It started mass production of battery cells at Tesla’s Gigafactory in Nevada earlier this year and plans to follow suit at a new plant in Dalian, China.
Reuters
Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this article
Want to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today.
Join our commenting forum
Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies