US launches new project to develop electric-vehicle batteries

Advertisement
By Reuters | Updated: 1 December 2012 13:55 IST
The Obama administration launched a fresh $120-million research project Friday, aimed at developing cheaper batteries for electric vehicles, a sector that has faltered despite billions of dollars of prior government investment.

The Energy Department will dole out the money over five years to establish a research hub for batteries and energy storage, backed by five national laboratories, five Midwestern universities and four private firms.

The four companies joining the project are Dow Chemical Co, Applied Materials Inc, Johnson Controls Inc and Clean Energy Trust.

Advertisement

During the Obama administration's first term, jump-starting advanced battery manufacturing was a major national initiative, which saw the Energy Department plow $2 billion of grants into 29 battery makers to build or update plants.

But the industry was hobbled by overcapacity, limp demand for electric vehicles and high-profile bankruptcies, including the collapse of government-backed battery maker A123.

Advertisement

Still, the government defended its efforts, saying that despite some failures, most of its investments were successful and helped double renewable-energy output from wind and solar.

"Not every company succeeds," Energy Secretary Steven Chu said at a news conference Friday announcing the new project. "Never should the United States say because one company didn't succeed as much as others, we should get out of the game."

Advertisement

Led by the Argonne National Laboratory near Chicago, the new research hub will combine several independent research programs into a single coordinated effort "to push the limits on battery advances," the department said.

Besides working on batteries for electric vehicles, the project will also tackle energy storage for the electric grid, officials said.

Advertisement

Many Republicans have attacked the Obama administration's direct investment in clean energy companies, arguing that the government should not be in the business of picking winners and losers in the private sector.

However, government investment in energy research and development still has broad bipartisan support in Congress.

© Thomson Reuters 2012

 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. OnePlus N6 Confirmed to Launch in India With an 8,000mAh Battery
  2. Tim Cook Says Apple Can No Longer Absorb Soaring Memory Costs Alone
  3. Vivo Y500 4G Global Launch Teased, Here's Where It Might Arrive First
  1. Google Home Speaker Finally Makes Its Global Debut, Available to Pre-Order in Select Markets: Price, Features
  2. Honor Teases MagicOS 11 Update With Liquid Glass-Inspired Design as Early Access Programme Kicks Off
  3. Samsung Galaxy Z Fold 8 Series Tipped to Launch at Higher Price Than Last Year’s Galaxy Z Fold 7
  4. ChatGPT’s Market Share Falls Below 50 Percent for First Time as Gemini, Claude Gain Ground: Report
  5. Apple May Reportedly Raise iPhone, Mac Prices Amid Memory Chip Shortage, Tim Cook Says
  6. Scientists Discover Giant Planet Formation Around Supermassive Black Holes
  7. EA Sports FC 26, Call of Duty: Vanguard and More Coming to Xbox Game Pass This Month
  8. Vivo Y500 4G Global Launch Teased; Confirmed to Debut With 8,100mAh Battery
  9. WhatsApp Working on Voice Note Widget for Quick Access via Android Home Screen
  10. Honor X80 Pro Max Teased With 10,000 Nits Display Ahead of June 22 Launch
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2026. All rights reserved.