Exclusive: Khosla-Backed Startup Claims Breakthrough With Largest-Ever AI Model on an iPhone Save 25% to unlock this story

Sign in
Subscribe

    Data Tools

    • About Pro
    • The Executives Leading the Data Center Race
    • The Next GPs 2026
    • The Next GPs 2025
    • The Rising Stars of AI Research
    • Leaders of the AI Shopping Revolution
    • Enterprise Software Startup Takeover List
    • Org Charts
    • The Information 50 2025
    • Generative AI Takeover List
    • Generative AI Database
    • AI Chip Database
    • AI Data Center Database
    • Tech IPO Tracker
    • Tech Sentiment Tracker
    • Gigafactory Database

    Special Projects

    • The Information 50 Database
    • VC Diversity Index
    • Enterprise Tech Powerlist
  • Org Charts
  • Deep Research
  • Tech
  • Finance
  • Weekend
  • Charts
  • Events
  • TITV
    • Directory

      Search, find and engage with others who are serious about tech and business.

    • Forum

      Follow and be a part of discussions about tech, finance and media.

    • Brand Partnerships

      Premium advertising opportunities for brands

    • Group Subscriptions

      Team access to our exclusive tech news

    • Newsletters

      Journalists who break and shape the news, in your inbox

    • Video

      Catch up on conversations with global leaders in tech, media and finance

    • Partner Content

      Explore our recent partner collaborations

      XFacebookLinkedInThreadsInstagram
    • Help & Support
    • RSS Feed
    • Careers
    Sign in
  • About Pro
  • The Executives Leading the Data Center Race
  • The Next GPs 2026
  • The Next GPs 2025
  • The Rising Stars of AI Research
  • Leaders of the AI Shopping Revolution
  • Enterprise Software Startup Takeover List
  • Org Charts
  • The Information 50 2025
  • Generative AI Takeover List
  • Generative AI Database
  • AI Chip Database
  • AI Data Center Database
  • Tech IPO Tracker
  • Tech Sentiment Tracker
  • Gigafactory Database

SPECIAL PROJECTS

  • The Information 50 Database
  • VC Diversity Index
  • Enterprise Tech Powerlist
Deep Research
TITV
Tech
Finance
Weekend
Charts
Events
Newsletters
  • Directory

    Search, find and engage with others who are serious about tech and business.

  • Forum

    Follow and be a part of discussions about tech, finance and media.

  • Brand Partnerships

    Premium advertising opportunities for brands

  • Group Subscriptions

    Team access to our exclusive tech news

  • Newsletters

    Journalists who break and shape the news, in your inbox

  • Video

    Catch up on conversations with global leaders in tech, media and finance

  • Partner Content

    Explore our recent partner collaborations

Subscribe
  • Sign in
  • Search
  • Opinion
  • Venture Capital
  • Artificial Intelligence
  • Startups
  • Market Research
    XFacebookLinkedInThreadsInstagram
  • Help & Support
  • RSS Feed
  • Careers

In-depth insights in seconds. Ask Deep Research.

The Electric

The 7 Things That Changed the Game for EVs and Batteries in 2021

Photo: Krisztian Bocsi/Bloomberg
By
Steve LeVine
[email protected]Profile and archive

Welcome back to The Electric!

The next Live Chat is this Tuesday at noon E.T.: Will the U.S. Control Its Own Battery Fate? At the cusp of the new age of batteries and electric vehicles, China starts with a potent strategic advantage—possession of some 80% of the global battery metals supply chain. For the entirety of the 2020s, it will supply most of these materials to the rest of the world, making it sort of a battery OPEC. To discuss what the U.S. does next, I'm excited to welcome Venkat Srinivasan, who is coordinating the joint U.S. government-private effort to create a U.S. battery supply chain. RSVP here.


The 7 Things That Changed the Game for EVs and Batteries in 2021

For a decade and a half and longer, battery researchers around the world have toiled away to beat the horrendous physics of electrochemistry. Their objective has been to enable a goldilocks electric vehicle—one that can travel a long distance on a charge, accelerate fast, last a long time, not catch fire, and cost the same as a conventional car. In a battery, many of these are contradictory objectives, but if you could get there what you would have is a superbattery.

Last year, the superbattery seemed to become real: Tesla unveiled work on a massive reconfiguration of the lithium-ion battery that it called simply the “4680,” named after its metric dimensions, and said would lower costs by more than 50%. General Motors announced the Ultium, a battery it claimed would achieve all the supercapabilities. And Chinese company BYD disclosed the most revolutionary battery of all—the Blade, achieving almost all the goals with an iron-based cathode at a much lower cost than the others. The sky seemed the limit in terms of accelerating the age of EVs that most people can afford.

As 2021 draws to a close, though, last year’s celebratory mood seems premature. All at once, auto and battery makers are confronted with higher-than-expected costs for the raw materials required to manufacture lithium-ion batteries, as well as acute metals shortages and a threat to the basic economics of their EV strategies. As a result, the more than $100 billion GM, Ford, Volkswagen and other major automakers have pledged toward developing EVs looks woefully inadequate. And the arrival of large numbers of affordable EVs seems likely to be delayed until the late 2020s.

Below, I sketch seven events that fundamentally changed EVs and batteries this year, and how those events could mean that the rest of the decade will look decidedly different from what much of the industry and many investors expected when the year began.

Recommended