Showing posts with label Rare Earth Metals. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rare Earth Metals. Show all posts

Monday, March 29, 2010

Electric Cars: Chevy Releases Volt Specs TNR.v, CZX.v, LMR.v, RM.v, LI.v, WLC.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, F, GM, DAI, BMW, AAPL, NSANY, BYDDY, RNO, GOOG, HEV,

Chevy Releases Volt Specs

Monday, March 29, 2010 2:59PM - By Chris Weiss

Chevy Volt Chevy Releases Volt Specs

The Chevrolet Volt is hands-down one of the most interesting vehicles on its way out of post-public-loan GM, and today Chevy provided some additional numbers on the extended-range EV. They may be preliminary, but they’re impressive nonetheless.

The Volt will put out 150 horses and 273 lb-ft through the combination of 1.4-liter four-cylinder flex-fuel engine and electric motor. The motor will derive power from a 16 kWh lithium-ion battery pack.

On the road, that system will deliver a practical top speed of 100 mph while offering 300 miles worth of range on a full tank of gas and 40 miles of electric-only driving. Chevy provides the 0 to 60 mph at 9 seconds. [via egmCarTech]"


As you can see from specs - Chevy Volt is not an Electric Toy, but a proper Electric Car with full functional utilities of a "normal" car with CE. Realisation of this fact and Chevy Volts on the streets will bring revaluation to the whole Electric Car Value Chain and particularly to Lithium sector.


"One out of four consumers say they would be willing to consider a plug-in electric car next time they are shopping for a new vehicle, Consumer Reports says one of its polls found. Seven percent said it is "very likely" they would buy one."

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Lithium Demand: The total Li-Ion battery market demand in 2020 will require about 200 GWh capacity TNR.v, CZX.v, LMR.v, RM.v, WLC.v, LI.v, SQM, FMC -

As usual, there will be more talks than action in the beginning. Then we will have an equipment supply lead time up to 30 months, add here technology development, project management and ISO certification. We are looking at least 5 years out into any meaningful Li-ion batteries production on a mass scale. Another surprise will come when new coming battery producers will be scrambling for Lithium supply to keep their production lines running. In brine production lead time can be up to 4-5 years and in hard rock mining 5-7 years. It is time now to move aggressively into Lithium supply chain.



PRTM Analysis Finds Li-ion Battery Overcapacity Estimates Largely Unfounded, with Potential Shortfalls Looming; Total Market Demand in 2020 Will Require 4x Capacity Announced To Date

22 March 2010

Prtmcapacity1
PRTM concludes that the large format Li-ion battery market could be under-supplied by nearly 10% by 2016. Click to enlarge.

Recent market reports have predicted that the global market for large format lithium-ion batteries—such as those used in plug-in vehicle applications—will see a substantial overcapacity in the coming years, with some predicting an excess of more than 100% in 2015. (Earlier post.)

However, Oliver Hazimeh, Director and Head of Global E-Mobility Practice at global management consulting firm PRTM, asserts that the notion of overcapacity is largely unfounded, and that, in fact, significant additional capacity may be needed to support the long-term growth of the electric transportation market. PRTM’s assessment, based on what it called a thorough review of the operational market dynamics, found the following:

  • Under a “Most Probable” scenario, battery manufacturing capacity will hit a shortfall by 2016. Additional capacity investments beyond those recently announced by battery manufacturers will be required to avoid a Li-Ion battery shortfall of 30% by 2017.

  • The total Li-Ion battery market demand in 2020 will require about 200 GWh capacity, which is 4x the 50 GWh capacity that has been announced to date.

  • A global footprint assessment of top battery manufacturers suggests that the United States and Europe are facing a shortfall in cell manufacturing capacity—the largest value-added step in battery production and a rapidly increasing source of global competitive advantage. Approximately 70% of the value of a Li-Ion battery pack resides in the Li-Ion cells, and low labor needs make manufacturing investments strategically sound.

  • Asia has been the center for consumer electronics-based Li-Ion battery manufacturing to date. As many countries worldwide consider building out automotive cell manufacturing to meet rising demand in the electric transportation sector, Asia is positioned to remain a leading net exporter of automotive battery cells under their current level of investment. Under-investments in cell manufacturing in the US and Europe to date—while offshore investments continue to rise—have wide-ranging consequences in global competitiveness. These outcomes include an inability to capitalize on an automotive battery market estimated to be $60 billion in 2020. The risks also include missing high-quality job creation opportunities in this sector.

PRTM’s assessment includes the following key aspects:

  1. All manufacturers will base future capacity investment on market demand. While battery companies are making initial investments slightly ahead of the market to optimize cost and scale, future investments will be made only when the market conditions justify such an investment.

  2. Capacity expansions will not take place in one tranche—they will be rolled out in several phases, through 2015 and beyond. Many companies plan to build large facilities capable of supporting future volume, but initial machinery capex will remain relatively small.

  3. Companies funded through US DOE stimulus may be incented to build ahead of the market, however stimulus-funded investment represents only 1/3rd of planned global capacity expansion—the remaining 2/3rds will remain driven purely by market demand.

  4. Previous reports matching market growth to planned capacity were relatively bullish on capacity expansion while being bearish on market growth. Moreover, large format cells can also be used in utility applications, which are not included in most market growth forecasts. This combination almost definitely would lead to an overcapacity projection.

  5. There are only a handful of capable and qualified suppliers of the capital equipment required for a Li-ion battery manufacturing facility. PRTM believes that lead-times are currently in the range of 18-30 months, significantly impacting the rate at which capacity can be installed.

Prtmcapacity2
PRTM finds that the US and Europe have under-invested in cell manufacturing capacity, which could lead to a potential shortfall in domestic Li-Ion cell supply. Click to enlarge.

PRTM analysis finds that EVs and plug-in hybrids (PHEVs) could account for nearly 10% of the global market by 2020, assuming significant barriers are addressed first.

Monday, March 22, 2010

EVs mass market: Chrysler announces electric Fiat 500 for the U.S. in 2012 TNR.v, CZX.v, LMR.v, RM.v, WLC.v, LI.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, HEV, AONE, F, NSANY


One more model of electric car will be coming on the roads in 2012, today it is EV Fiat 500. It is with lithium based battery and our iPod moment in Electric Cars is coming fast. With every new model and announced production decision strategic value of Lithium and REE will be coming on the radar screens of investors.


"Washington is slowly getting into the Lithium and REE issues. TREM 2010 which held its place in the capital has provided an alarming set of facts to the government authorities and has issued a set of recommendations for implementation. Will there be any action taken? - you never know with politicians, but this move is a first sign of recognising the importance of secure strategic supply of materials for the new economy based on clean tech, electric cars and smart grid systems. Question is rather simple in nature: who will finance companies involved in Lithium and REE supply chain like International Lithium Corp and TNR Gold American companies, Japanese, Koreans or Chinese? Only one North American company - Canadian Magna has been involved in strategic Lithium deal in Argentina recently in a sharp contrast to aggressive move of Chinese companies in Australia and even more aggressive approach of Japanese Trading Houses in Argentina, Canada and Nevada".



Chrysler announces electric Fiat 500 for the U.S. in 2012



By Jim Frenak
Chrysler plans to develop an electric vehicle for the U.S. starting in 2012 based on its Fiat 500 small car, it announced today. It will look pretty much like the Fiat 500EV that it showed off at the big auto show in Detroit in January.

""The Fiat 500 is a small, lightweight platform perfect for integrating electric-vehicle technology," said Scott Kunselman, senior vice president of engineering for Chrysler.

Chrysler had planned to market three electric vehicles before Fiat became the controlling owner during its bankruptcy reorganization last year. Fiat shelved those plans, but today's announcement makes it clear that electric cars are clearly in Chrysler's future. Why?:

The great thing about electric vehicles is that they really aren't that complicated: The Fiat 500EV powertrain consists of a high-power electric motor, advanced lithium-ion battery and an EV control unit to manage power flows. The problem is usually cost, especially for the batteries.

Though the Fiat is an Italian car, all of the powertrain engineering and vehicle development will take place at Chrysler Group headquarters in Auburn Hills, Mich. Pricing will be announced closer to launch, but Chrysler vows it will be competitive with similar electric vehicles in the market.

The gasoline version of the 500 is due in the U.S. at the end of the year.

Chrysler already has a head start on electric vehicle development. It has 140 plug-in electric Ram pickups for a three-year demonstration project that includes various geographic and climatic locations across the USA."

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Electric Cars 101: How the Volt Works TNR.v, CZX.v, LI.v, RM.v, LMR.v, WLC.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, NSANY, F, BYDDY, TTM, TM, BMW, RNO, DAI, HEV, AONE, VLNC,


We will post a few videos to address a general need for market education on Electric Cars 101: technology, lithium batteries, their safety, reliability and experience of electric drive. The main message is that you do not have to compromise on comfort and safety in order to be green, if your car is produced like GM Volt on the following Videos. There are models of Electric Cars from different automakers with different level of comfort and price to be paid for it.
The first battle for market place is open: GM is positioning its Volt as "a better Electric Car" - we guess better than Nissan Leaf - pure EV, because GM Volt has a range extender (CE powered generator) to address "Range Anxiety". It will be interesting to see Nissan Leaf reply in its AD campaign. We think that both concepts will have its space in the market place, at first GM Volt will be more appealing in US and Canada with its vast distances vs Nissan Leaf adoption in more compact urban space of Europe, later with further development of the lithium batteries pure EVs like Nissan Leaf will start to take over, due to cheaper (when powerful lithium battery will cost less that EC generator pack) and more reliable composition. Our investment thesis Electric Cars Value Chain will benefit with all these concepts on the roads.


Get connected to the Electrification in action Videos on all aspects of GM Volt Technology and Lithium battery:

Thursday, January 21, 2010

Lithium and REE: The Electric Car Revolution Will Soon Take to the Streets TNR.v, CZX.v, WLC.v, LI.v, RM.v, LMR.v, AVL.to, RES.v, QUC.v, BYDDY, NSANY




CS. Obama has told you about our Investment Thesis in three short sentences. We are not so smart and we do not have such an authority - we need to bring reason to decompound his message. Time for us to drop couple of lines about Middle-class and our Christmas wish.




YALE
Environment 360:


21 JAN 2010: REPORT

For years, the promise and hype surrounding electric cars failed to materialize. But as this year’s Detroit auto show demonstrated, major car companies and well-funded startups — fueled by federal clean-energy funding and rapid improvement in lithium-ion batteries — are now producing electric vehicles that will soon be in showrooms.

by jim motavalli

Electric cars are a green movement that is finally moving. Shunted to the side as the public indulged its love affair with gas-guzzling SUVs and four-wheel-drive trucks, history has finally caught up with the plug-in vehicle.

The North American International Auto Show in Detroit is the domestic auto industry’s biggest annual showcase, and the new models have traditionally been brought out in a son et lumière of dancing girls, deafening music, and dry ice smoke. The few green cars that made it this far were usually for display only — very few actually made it to showrooms.

Tesla
Getty Images
The Tesla Model S electric vehicle at the North American International Auto Show in Detroit.
But not this year. It’s become a race to market for green cars, and soon you’ll be able to buy many of the electric vehicles that were on display last week in Detroit. The auto show featured one hybrid and battery electric car introduction after another. Although the only truly road-worthy, plug-in electric vehicle you can buy today is the $109,000 Tesla Roadster, by the end of 2010 it will be joined by such contenders as the Nissan Leaf, Coda sedan, and the Think City.

Indeed, the entire auto industry — from giants such as Ford, GM, and Renault-Nissan to startups such as Fisker Automotive — has joined the movement to build and market affordable electric vehicles.

There’s a reason the automakers in Detroit are finally plugging in as something more than a greenwashing exercise. Spurring them forward is a historic confluence of events. Chief among them are Obama administration green initiatives, including Department of Energy (DOE) loans and grants, as well as economic stimulus funds that provide $30 billion for green energy programs, tax credits for companies that invest in advanced batteries, and $2.4 billion in strategic grants to speed the adoption of new batteries. (Much of that money is going to Michigan, which despite record unemployment is emerging as something of a green jobs center.)

Other factors behind the push to manufacture electric vehicles are a federal mandate to improve fuel efficiency to an average of 35.5 miles per gallon by 2016, concerns about global warming and peak oil, and sheer technological progress building better batteries.

Even without federal largesse, some companies are moving aggressively into the electric vehicle market. A prime example: Coda Automotive, a
A key factor in making electric vehicles possible is the rapid development of lithium-ion batteries.
southern California start-up, has raised an impressive $74 million in three rounds of private funding. CEO and President Kevin Czinger is a former Goldman Sachs executive, as is co-chairman Steven Heller. Among the company’s investors are Henry M. Paulson, who was Goldman Sachs’ chairman and Treasury Secretary under the second President Bush. Clearly, these former investment bankers see electric cars as a good bet.

A key factor in making today’s electric vehicles possible is the rapid development of the energy-dense lithium-ion battery. William Clay Ford Jr., the executive chairman of the company that bears his name, told me in Detroit, “Five years ago, battery development had hit a wall, and we were pushing hydrogen hard. But now so much money and brainpower has been thrown at electrification that we’re starting to see significant improvements in batteries in a way we hadn’t anticipated. Now we have the confidence that the customer can have a good experience with batteries.”

Drawing a huge crowd, Tesla Motors Chairman and CEO Elon Musk showed off his company’s 1,000th electric Roadster at the auto show. “For a little company, it’s a huge milestone,” he told me. “A year ago, we had built only 150 cars. We had two stores then, and now it’s a dozen.”

For a major automaker, 1,000 cars would not be much to show for a year, but electric vehicles are still in their infancy. And since the electric car’s
An e360 discussion with Tesla's Elon Musk.
first swan song in the 1920s — when the widespread availability of petroleum ushered in the era of the gasoline-powered car — very few start-up companies have reached the milestone of making green vehicles, especially battery-powered ones.

Here’s a look at some of the prime contenders bringing battery cars and plug-in hybrids to market:

  • Renault-Nissan Alliance. This is the one automaker with a truly global plug-in strategy and the means to carry it out. Under the Nissan banner, the company will deploy the Leaf battery sedan, with 100-mile, all-electric range. Nissan isn’t just dumping its sleek entry into the market — it’s also building a home charger with new partner AeroVironment and partnering with local, state and federal governments — both in the U.S. and abroad — on public charging stations. In partnership with Better Place, the company will deploy a second Renault electric vehicle as part of its plan to wire up Israel with charging stations for electric cars. Renault-Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn predicts that electric vehicles could constitute 10 percent of world car sales by 2020.

  • Ford Motor Company. Ford’s green strategy includes a plug-in version of the new Focus for 2011 and a “next-generation” hybrid — based on its global compact-car platform, or C-platform — in 2012. The company announced in Detroit that it would invest $450 million in Michigan as part of its electrification strategy. Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm told me at the auto show that until recently the state “wasn’t sure it had a viable auto industry.” Today, she said, the state is enjoying $1 billion in new auto-related investment, much of it jump-started by a combination of federal funding and state tax credits.

  • General Motors. GM’s big news is the Chevrolet Volt, which has definitely helped the company’s image. The Volt, which uses a small gas engine to generate electricity for its electric motor, is a lot of fun to drive if the version I drove recently in Michigan is any indication. Until now, GM has stumbled in its hybrid strategy, and it really needs this car — which will go on sale at the end of the year for a hefty $40,000 — to be a hit. But success may be more a matter of perception than actual sales. “In terms of numbers, the Volt will be pretty small for the first couple of years,” says product chief Bob Lutz. A Cadillac version of the Volt is also a possibility.

  • Tesla Motors. This California start-up launched at the top of the market with its $109,000 Roadster, which combines sexy looks with supercar performance (zero to 60 in 3.9 seconds). The company is on something of a roll, having sold 10 percent of itself to Daimler for $50 million, and landed $465 million in DOE funding for its forthcoming Model S sedan — a Maserati-like, more practical version of the Roadster. Tesla’s Musk says that the company’s strategy has always been to use its sale of performance cars to finance its third vehicle, a mass-market electric vehicle. The company is currently looking at California locations for a Model S factory.

  • Fisker Automotive. Perhaps Tesla’s closest competitor when it comes to glamour electric vehicles, Fisker – whose CEO is Danish-born automotive designer Henrik Fisker — is preparing to debut a high-performance plug-in hybrid (zero to 60 in 5.8 seconds, with 67 mpg fuel efficiency) known as the Karma at the end of the year. Al Gore is on the waiting list. Fisker also has a lower-cost car in the wings, called Project Nina. Fisker won $528 million from the DOE to build the Nina in a former GM factory in Delaware.

  • Coda Automotive. This start-up will deliver, in late 2010, a small battery-powered sedan with batteries from its own joint venture in China. The car is based on the Saibao, a Chinese car, but Coda has put a host of western companies to work honing an
    Electric vehicles will be built in hard-hit Elkhart, Indiana, once the ‘the RV Capital of the World.’
    electric drivetrain for it. “A large part of our mission is to accelerate adoption of all-electric vehicles,” Coda CEO Kevin Czinger told me. “We have put together a core group of auto and battery engineers, and are leveraging specialty automotive firms that we think can get us to the right price point.” Coda will launch with an Internet marketing strategy in California only, but it will have the capacity to produce 20,000 cars a year.

  • Think Global. Think is a survivor, with perhaps the longest and most colorful history among green automakers. It is a Norwegian company that attracted Ford Motor Company investment in the late 1990s with its plastic-bodied City commuter car. Ford sold the company in 2003 and it went through bankruptcy proceedings in late 2008. It has since emerged under the partial ownership of U.S. battery company Ener1, which snagged $118 million in DOE funding to expand its battery production in Indiana. Think electric vehicles will also be built there starting in 2011, in hard-hit Elkhart — once proudly known as the “RV Capital of the World” — and now suffering the effects of the recession. The two-seat Think City (with approximately 100-mile range on lithium-ion batteries) will sell for less than $20,000 in the U.S., but that price does not include the leased battery pack and includes the $7,500 federal tax credit for electric vehicles.

The list of players in the electric vehicle race goes on. Toyota is building

MORE FROM YALE E360

The potential for electric vehicles has been talked about for decades. But a former Israeli software entrepreneur is developing a game-changing infrastructure that could finally make them feasible.

After years of false starts and failures, the electric car may finally be poised to go big-time. With automakers from GM to Chrysler to Nissan preparing to roll out new plug-in hybrids or all-electric models, it looks like the transition from gasoline to electricity is now irreversible.
plug-in hybrids and fuel-cell vehicles, and showed off a small cousin of the Prius in Detroit. Chrysler has an ambitious electric vehicle rollout that’s been stalled by the company’s bankruptcy and merger with Fiat. Honda continues to deploy clever hybrid cars, including the upcoming two-seat CR-Z it showed in Detroit. BMW has electrified the Mini for a test program, and has similar intentions for the Concept ActiveE, a plug-in version of the Series 1 BMW coupe. And Audi has shown sudden interest in this segment, debuting the second of its electric e-tron vehicles.

By this time next year, electric cars will no longer be just on auto show stands, but will have arrived in showrooms at last.

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Lithium: Magna buys stake in small lithium miner TNR.v, CZX.v, WLC.v, LI.V, RM.v, LMR.v, LAT.v, CLQ.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, BYDDY, HEV, AONE, NSANY, NEC, F

" As we have mentioned in our Macro View on Micro Caps - total market value of annual Lithium Carbonate sales is 800 million dollars with usage for batteries a little bit over 20%. There is no Electric Cars' batteries in this amount as there is no EVs on the streets in any meaningful number yet. This is the place where growth will be explosive should our scenario for EV mobility revolution materialise. Driving force will be consolidation between auto makers and battery makers with rising Lithium prices to secure supply. Price of Lithium content in the battery cost is below 3-4%, it can rise 2-3 times before affecting the cost structure. We are interested here in a highly leveraged focused junior mining Lithium exploration and development plays."




Our driving force in Lithium and REE sector is out in the market. Consolidation is under way and deals are in the air. All Lithium sector is on the move recently: Western Lithium WLC.v hit 2.0CAD and TNR Gold / International Lithium TNR.v is breaking out of 0.3CAD range. Our consolidation stage could be over with Detroit auto show in the spotlight: industry insiders are taking positions now - automakers are coming into our Lithium game with further consolidation to secure supply.



Globe and Mail:

Magna buys stake in small lithium miner





As the U.S. tightens fuel economy standards, auto makers are looking at lithium-ion battery technology. That has led the Canadian auto parts company to eye a supplier of the metal
Andy Hoffman and Greg Keenan
Thursday, January 07, 2010
Canadian car parts giant Magna International Inc. is jumping into the mining sector with a strategic investment in a privately held lithium firm that it hopes will provide a secure supply of the metal used to make batteries for electric vehicles, according to sources.
Magna is understood to have participated in a $10.5-million equity financing by Toronto-based Lithium Americas Corp. that was completed Dec. 23. The equity deal gives Magna the right to acquire a percentage of any lithium produced by the mining company in exchange for an interest-free loan for some of the money needed to develop the project in Argentina.
Although Magna's initial investment is small, it underscores the Aurora, Ont.-based company's commitment to producing components for electric-powered vehicles that will run on lithium-ion battery technology. “They are all coming downstream. Lithium is going to be big and they better have supply,” said a source close to the deal.
Environmental technologies, including lithium-ion batteries, are a potentially huge growth area for Magna as auto makers race to bring hybrid-electric and battery-powered cars to market to meet new fuel economy standards being put in place in the U.S.
Magna developed a battery-powered version of the Focus compact car for Ford Motor Co., which was unveiled a year ago (and now stars nightly on The Jay Leno Show ).
But Magna is also trying to expand that expertise to other auto makers.
Ford and its rivals are seeking financially strong suppliers to help them develop these new technologies, which involve investments of tens of billions of dollars.
Magna is among the most well positioned to do that because of a cash hoard of about $1-billion (U.S.) and expertise in a broad range of auto components, including complete vehicle assembly on a contract basis for several auto makers.
Magna chairman and founder Frank Stronach said last year that he would like to see the batteries assembled in Canada and that governments want Magna to assemble batteries here.
Tracy Fuerst, a spokeswoman for Magna, would not comment.
Lithium Americas is just one of scores of junior mining firms with lithium development projects that have sprouted recently to take advantage of the sudden investor interest in the commodity.
The company hopes to produce lithium from brine lakes, which it says is cheaper than extracting the mineral from rocks.
Although lithium has been used for years in cellphones, high-tech alloys and by the pharmaceutical industry, the prospect of soaring demand from the auto sector has made it the metal of the moment in the junior mining sector.
Industry analysts estimate that if hybrid and electric vehicles reach 10 per cent of total vehicle sales, the market for lithium-ion and other advanced batteries could grow to between $10-billion (U.S.) by 2015 and $15-billion by 2020. Currently, the lead-acid battery market is worth between $7-billion and $10-billion.
Lithium Americas was created last summer as a spinoff of Latin American Minerals Inc., which trades on the TSX Venture Exchange and still holds a 17-per-cent stake.
Boasting lithium development projects in the Argentine provinces of Jujuy and Salta, the privately held Lithium Americas is expected to conduct a public stock offering within the next year that could raise between $25-million (Canadian) and $50-million.
Raymond Mitchell, chief financial officer of both Lithium Americas and Latin American Minerals, would not comment. “I can't comment on who our investors are,” he said."
 

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