Given that it’s just possible that 2024 will be a difficult year, I’m committed to occasionally finding good news to parse—for my benefit, if not for yours. Hence today we’re going to talk about batteries, which I realize sounds somewhat spinach-y. But bear with me, and see if you’re not charged up by the end.
In 1900, about a third of cars in America were powered by batteries. But, as a comprehensive new report from the Rocky Mountain Institute makes clear, there was a problem: the energy density—the amount of energy carried per pound—was too low: a car could go 40 or 50 miles on a charge. Gasoline, by contrast, was a great store of energy: you could put 400 or 500 miles worth of it in a tank. True, it was highly flammable, created air pollution, and (as we later found out) raised the temperature of the earth, but energy density carried the day. And really, no one much bothered to try and improve batteries for most of the 20th century until—in Japan and the U.S.—consumer electronics began to create demand. It really wasn’t practical to figure out a gas-powered calculator, and so innovation got to work, eventually sweeping past Duracells and Everreadys to give us batteries (mostly based on lithium) so energy dense that they began to be practical for cars.
We’ve now reached the point that, last month, a Chinese automaker—he’s sometimes called Asia’s Elon Musk, though that seems like an undeserved insult—drove his company’s flagship model 600 miles on a single charge, besting Tesla’s 405-mile Model S range.
And the point of the RMI report is that this kind of progress is only going to continue, because
Rising energy density keeps unlocking new uses while declining costs enhance affordability and accelerate market uptake. This uptake, in turn, drives further cost reductions and continuous innovation — a cycle of self-perpetuating progress. The result is a domino effect, whereby batteries enter new markets, from country to country and from one sector to the next. Geopolitical tension has brought new players into the markets, speeding up the race to the top.
The pace of change keeps confounding experts, who consistently underestimate the potential and exponential growth of batteries. Defying past predictions, batteries now play a key role in the energy transition and their continued rapid growth signals a seismic shift in the energy system to come.
Indeed, as the report makes clear, every time we double battery deployment, we increase the energy density of batteries by 18 percent, and we cut the cost by 19 percent. And there is a lot of doubling going on, as this Bloomberg chart makes clear
You might have questions. Like
#Could we possibly build enough factories to produce batteries to meet this demand? And the answer, apparently, is yes. Check this out:
Battery demand grew fast over the past decade, but even so, manufacturing supply has been able to outpace it: demand grew by a factor of 24, yet battery manufacturing capacity went up by a factor of 42. As battery manufacturers are expecting more growth to come, annual manufacturing capacity additions are still rising — today’s annual commissions of new factories are more than 18 times those of just five years ago.
As the prospect of rising demand became apparent, investment markets paid attention and made ample capital available. According to Bloomberg New Energy Finance (BNEF), investment in battery factories to-day ($45 billion in 2022) is considerably higher than investment in solar and wind factories combined ($33 billion).
As capital availability ceased to be the primary limiting factor, the challenge of meeting demand has primarily been an engineering one: factories need time to be built and start operations. Companies are becoming more proficient at building out factories — the first battery gigafactory opened in 2016, and now dozens are under construction. According to Benchmark Minerals, there are now 240 operational gigafactories across the world, and this is set to increase to over 400 by 2030.
In fact, the authors of the RMI report describe this as the most intense industrial buildout since the start of World War II when America converted its manufacting base to war production. I described that remarkable stretch in an article eight years ago in the New Republic, when there was just one of these gigafactories under construction in the U.S. An engineer named Tom Solomon, who had built a huge Intel chip factory in Arizona helped me with the math. He started by looking at SolarCity, a clean-energy company that is currently building the nation’s biggest solar panel factory in Buffalo. “They’re calling it the giga-factory,” Solomon says, “because the panels it builds will produce one gigawatt worth of solar power every year.” Using the SolarCity plant as a rough yardstick, Solomon calculated that America needs 295 solar factories of a similar size to defeat climate change—roughly six per state—plus a similar effort for wind turbines.
So—this battery effort (which of course allows those solar panels and wind turbines to in effect operate day and night)—is on the right scale. We’re doing gigas.
Another question you could ask is,
#Won’t we run out of the raw materials these batteries require?
Apparently not. As demand has gone up, we’ve found lots of new supplies. Here’s RMI’s take:
In the long term, analysis by the Energy Transitions Commission indicates there are more than sufficient battery mineral resources available for the entire energy transition.Reaching net zero will only take one quarter of today’s lithium, one-third of nickel and a quarter of known cobalt resources.
Moreover, as mineral supply has consistently been under pressure to scale, battery companies have invested heavily in innovation to help alleviate pressure on the mining sector. Innovation in higher battery energy density led to fewer minerals being needed per battery. The growth of the battery-recycling industry will alleviate demand for new mining of minerals. The development of new battery chemistries such as sodium-ion, iron, lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cathodes, and silicon anodes can diversify the demand for minerals.
You can find a similar analysis by Hannah Ritchie here, but in truth this seems almost intutive to me. Almost every day I get new reports from the tech world—here, for instance, is a description of a Scandinavian breakthrough in sodium-ion batteries “based on a hard carbon anode and a Prussian White-based cathode, and is free from lithium, nickel, cobalt and graphite.” Do I know what means exactly? I do not, but I know what it means generally: that lots of people are at work on this problem. And I know that this particulary company is now building a factory in Canada to make a lot of these batteries: more gigas. And I know that a Chinese division of Volkswagen is as of this week offering autos that use sodium-based batteries, albeit of a slightly less exalted design.
The point is that what we’re leveraging now is human intelligence, and that is a remarkable expanding commodity. If you rely on oil, there’s less to be found each year, and it’s harder to find (not impossible, as the frackers have proved, but hard). That’s why the price goes up. But with solar and wind and battery technology, it’s not the commodity but the design that matters, and those are coming constantly-t-his innovative iteration keeps making these technologies cleaner, more affordable, and more efficient. That’s the useful part of capitalism—and indeed of human nature.
The not-useful part of capitalism—and indeed of human nature—is the part that would happily use slaves to mine cobalt if that pushed profit margins up some. Which is one reason that activists are every bit as useful as engineers, because they push to try and make progress humane. RMI is hopeful that they’ve begun to succeed when it comes to batteries
Addressing social inequity in the battery value chain, particularly in cobalt mines, has become a priority for the industry. Companies and stakeholders are actively implementing measures to ensure ethical sourcing and fair labor practices. Initiatives include stringent supplier audits to enforce labor standards, investment in technology to trace mineral origins, and partnerships with local communities to improve working conditions and livelihoods. Furthermore, significant efforts are being made to support educational and health programs in mining communities. These actions are complemented by a shift toward sourcing materials from regions with more robust regulatory frameworks, and by investing in alternative battery technologies that reduce reliance on conflict-prone minerals such as cobalt. This multi-pronged approach aims to create a more equitable and sustainable battery value chain, mitigating the social impacts associated with mineral extraction.
I hope very much this is true, because in general renewable energy represents a great step forward for the poorest and most vulnerable people on the planet—not only are they the most exposed to the climate calamity, but nine million die each year from breathing the combustion byproducts of fossil fuel. (That’s one death in five on this planet).
The other reason activists are needed, of course, is that capitalism and human nature don’t make this happen by themselves, at least at the pace that is required to catch up with the physics of global warming. That takes constant political pressure, of the kind that brought us the IRA. As the RMI report puts it
Governments, companies, researchers, and climate advocates will have to unite to drive sustainable and equitable growth in the battery industry. This includes a focus on innovative R&D for sustainable technology and adaptable solutions, supported by government funding and corporate investment. Collaboration is key, with an emphasis on establishing fair supply chains and enhancing transparency, bolstered by standardized regulations to ensure safety, quality, and environmental integrity.
Simultaneously, adopting circular economy principles will be crucial. This involves designing batteries for easier recycling and longer life, promoting the reuse of materials, and supporting infrastructure for efficient recycling processes. Researchers and companies can play a pivotal role in advancing these technologies, while governments can aid by implementing supportive policies and regulations, ensuring a cohesive and sustainable approach across the industry.
To ensure fairness in the battery industry’s growth, policies must equitably distribute costs and benefits, especially in mining regions. Significant investment is needed in local communities and sustainable job creation, such as emphasized by the White House’s commitment to a domestic supply chain for critical minerals.Moreover, a broader understanding of environmental justice impacts is crucial, beyond traditional greenhouse gas and cost analyses, to assess local socioeconomic and environmental effects fully.
We could do this same analysis with solar panels and wind turbines and heat pumps and e-bikes and a bunch of other technologies—and perhaps we will. But I hope this serves to remind you that all is not lost; that while we’re engaged in the sometimes grim task of political change, there are forces at work on the planet that should put—well, a charge into us.
In other energy and climate news:
+After endless delay—much of it brought to you by Robert F. Kennedy Jr, and also members of the Koch clan—Vineyard Wind has begun producing power. As the Guardian reports,
The first wind turbine in the Vineyard Wind development started to whirr on Tuesday, delivering around 5MW of power to the New England grid. The operator of the project said it expects to have five turbines operational in the early part of this year, before eventually having 62 turbines as part of the project, which will produce enough electricity to power 400,000 homes.
“This is a historic moment for the American offshore wind industry,” said Maura Healey, the governor of Massachusetts. “This is clean, affordable energy made possible by the many advocates, public servants, union workers and business leaders who worked for decades to accomplish this achievement.”
+It’s just possible that Ian ‘Sandy’ Frazier is the best writer at work in the English language—I’ve been an unabashed fan since I was 21 and shared an office with him at the New Yorker. Anyway, his latest is for Yale Environment 360, and it’s about the largest beaver dam on planet earth
As far as is known, only one person has ever been to the world’s largest beaver dam. In July 2014, Rob Mark, of Maplewood, New Jersey, 44 years old at the time, reached the dam after a challenging journey. Holding the flag of the Explorers Club, the international organization with headquarters in New York City, he took a photo of himself standing on the dam. The top of the structure was the only solid ground he had encountered for miles. After he got back, a newspaper in Edmonton did a story about him, and he appeared in other newspapers and a travel magazine. His achievement is like the dam in that so far no one has said it isn’t unique.
+I was glad I had that story about Canadian wilderness to read, because the larger story from the far north is grim: a new study shows Canada has been, for fifty years, destroying the vast boreal forest with logging practices that shred the integrity of the ecosystem
“You still maintain a forest cover and you might still maintain the forest in a land-use sense over time,” the study’s lead author said. “But you have degraded some aspect of its ecological quality.”
And most ecologists regard degradation as the consequence of the type of large scale clear-cutting that is nearly the universal method of logging in Canada.
“Forest degradation is the more important metric for Canada because it really captures more of what’s actually happening,” professor Peter Wood said. “Canada has downplayed the impact of the forest industry.”
+New York City’s congestion pricing—a hefty toll on cars and trucks venturing south of 60th Street—seems certain to go into effect sometime in 2024, and if there’s anyone to thank it’s Charles Komanoff, the indefatigable advocate for transportation alternatives (and carbon taxes). Here’s his take on the new law (from the wonderful Streetsblog), and here’s New York Times resident economics thinker Peter Coy giving it his blessing
It will make Manhattan’s streets less jammed, which will make driving in the city less agonizing. Buses will become more popular because they will move faster. Ambulances and fire trucks will get to their destinations sooner. There will be less air pollution.
And the money raised from the congestion charges — estimated at about $1 billion a year — will be enough to cover interest and principal payments on about $15 billion of capital improvements to the city’s subways and buses and regional train lines.
+Sigh. U.S. Liquefied Natural Gas production hit a new record high in December, as the export onslaught continues unabated. Happily, Ben Jealous, who as head of the Sierra Club is America’s most high-profile environmental campaigner, is weighing in
Currently, nine export facilities are operating in the U.S., with a capacity that makes our country the leading exporter of gas in the world. The industry is proposing at least 30 new or expanded facilities, largely on the Gulf Coast. A Sierra Club analysis found that the full proposed LNG buildout could contribute to the climate crisis as much as 681 coal plants or 548 million gasoline-powered cars each year. That’s a step backward almost too large to comprehend.
In front of regulators right now is a test case for just how committed the Biden administration is to protecting the climate, domestic energy consumers and local communities above the fossil fuel industry.
More on this to come soon—and if you can, block out Feb 6-8 for a trip to DC. If the Department of Energy won’t commit to pausing and re-evaluating its permit process for LNG exports, that’s the date for planned civil disobedience outside DOE hq. Here’s where to sign up
Great article - thanks very much for this! Batteries are now on their own Moore's Law exponential curve. This will help greatly in a few years when a home solar and battery installation costs half or a quarter as much as it does now. A hint: the electrical boxes for managing the power from panels, batteries, and the mains will be a next point of serious investment, especially when homeowners get the rights everywhere to sell power back to the local utilities.
Somewhere around 1990 my brother let me borrow his cell phone. It was the size of a small briefcase, and 90% of that was battery. My, how things have changed.
EV battery development will no doubt mimic that of cell phones. I have no doubt that as EV sales increase, more and more money will be available for battery R&D, which will make EVs progressively smaller, lighter, cheaper & more ubiquitous - just like cell phones. This is good, because the only thing that will wean capitalists away from their fossils is the opportunity to make even more money with electric vehicles.