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Industryweek 26708 Bmw Electric Car 1 1 1
Industryweek 26708 Bmw Electric Car 1 1 1
Industryweek 26708 Bmw Electric Car 1 1 1
Industryweek 26708 Bmw Electric Car 1 1 1
Industryweek 26708 Bmw Electric Car 1 1 1

BMW Sees 10-Fold Jump in Its Need for Battery Materials by 2025

Dec. 15, 2017
“In the past three to four months, we’ve noticed that other manufacturers are seriously looking at cobalt supply,” said Markus Duesmann, a BMW purchasing executive. “It’s gotten more hectic and changed a lot over the past year, since so many more are looking for deals.”

BMW AG’s needs for car-battery raw materials such as cobalt and lithium will surge 10-fold by the middle of the next decade, pushing the German carmaker increasingly to forge long-term deals as shortages loom.

Purchase contracts with five- to 10-year time frames are close to being completed, the manufacturer’s head of procurement said on Dec. 15.

Concerns about supply bottlenecks, especially for cobalt, have prompted auto producers including Volkswagen AG to step up efforts to ensure they have enough.

BMW plans to offer 25 electrified vehicles by 2025, while VW is targeting a 300-model battery-powered lineup by 2030.

“We’ve been intensively focusing on how to manage future cobalt supply for about a year now,” said Markus Duesmann, the BMW purchasing executive. “Before, it wasn’t clear just how quickly demand will accelerate.”

Prices for cobalt, which helps conduct electricity and is comparatively light, have more than doubled this year. Glencore Plc, the largest producer of the metal, said this week that it will be in such short supply, auto manufacturers will have to come up with alternative sources. Likewise, the price of lithium has jumped.

“By 2025, we’ll need up to 10 times as much of the battery raw materials than we do currently,” Duesmann said, noting that Munich-based BMW is set this year to sell a minimum 100,000 cars that are at least partly powered by the technology.

“Today we are a leading manufacturer of electrified vehicles, so a 10-fold increase until 2025, for us, is enormous,” Duesmann added.

Rapid growth of electric-car development highlights the urgency of solving the supply riddle. Volkswagen will invest more than 34 billion euros (US$40 billion) in the next five years as part of a push into battery-powered vehicles and autonomous-driving systems.Daimler AG is spending 10 billion euros on 10 battery models by 2022.

The boom in electric cars could more than quadruple demand for cobalt to in excess of 450,000 tons by 2030 from less than 100,000 tons last year, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

 “In the past three to four months, we’ve noticed that other manufacturers are seriously looking at cobalt supply,” said Duesmann. “It’s gotten more hectic and changed a lot over the past year, since so many more are looking for deals.”

By Elisabeth Behrmann

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