Nat Bullard Profile picture
Nov 30, 2021 12 tweets 6 min read Read on X
🧵1/ Lithium-ion battery pack prices fell 6% year-on-year to $132 per kilowatt-hour (real 2021$). That's down 90% since 2010's $1240/kWh! But, there is much more to it than headline figures. Highlights from @BloombergNEF @JamesTFrith follow. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
2/ On a volume-weighted average basis across the battery industry, prices fell to $132 per kilowatt-hour in 2021. This is down from $140/kWh in 2020 (in real 2021 dollars). The 6% drop isn’t as drastic as the 9% decline we had forecast last year. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
3/ Why are this year’s prices higher than expected? The cost of raw materials used in the cathode — lithium, cobalt and nickel — and other key components including the electrolyte have risen this year, putting more pressure on the industry. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
4/ Li-ion battery pack price increases have been more prominent in the second half of 2021, and even led to Chinese battery manufacturer BYD announcing a 20% battery price increase in November. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
5/ That said - price increases "aren't as bad as I feared in September", says @JamesTFrith. 4 reasons:
1. Relatively low prices in 1H 21
2. More lithium ion phosphate used in 2021
3. Cathode chemistries using less cobalt
4. Commodity index-linked prices
bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
6/ Chart: 2021 all-in battery price ($132/kWh) is about the same as the pack price alone in 2015 ($130/kWh) bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
7/ Great quote from @JamesTFrith
"When I start talking about battery prices, I inevitably get a bunch of folks saying that these prices are unobtainable and unrealistic. However, this really depends on the sector you are working in and how big your order volumes are."
8/ Here's why: order scale and application all matter. Automakers with annual orders in the tens of gigawatt-hours are able to negotiate more competitive pricing. In 2021, battery-pack pricing reported to BNEF ranged from $85/kWh to $546/kWh.
9/ For a sense of pack price by sector:
E-bus/commercial (China) $101/kWh
BEV $118/kWh
Stationary storage $152/kWh
E-bus/commercial (ex-China) $330/kWh
PHEV $337/kWh
bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
10/ Conclusion (1): 2021 has been a wake-up call for the battery industry, with the realization that we are at a point now where prices may not necessarily fall every year.
11/ Conclusion (2): In the long run, says @JamesTFrith, "I’m still confident prices in 2030 will be close to half of what they are today, but it may not be smooth sailing to get there."
12/ Conclusion (3): For the moment, buyers, sellers, providers, developers need to concentrate on getting the industry through the next 18 months, to ensure the continued electrification of transport and other sectors / thanks again @JamesTFrith. End🧵 bloomberg.com/news/articles/…

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More from @NatBullard

Oct 2, 2022
Good morning. 🧵on aggregated US power generation interconnection queues.
1/ there is a lot of solar. 674 Gigawatts worth, 42% of it with storage.
There’s also 250GW of wind, 75GW Of gas, 6.3GW of nuclear, 900 megawatts of coal. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
🧵 on aggregated US power generation interconnection queues.
2/ the further west you go, the more solar+storage there is. Almost no standalone solar plants planned for California. Few in the rest of the west. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
🧵 on aggregated US power generation interconnection queues.
3/ solar resource quality peaked about a decade ago. Not a surprise. Only so many ideal high desert sites out there. bloomberg.com/news/articles/…
Read 4 tweets
Sep 22, 2022
🧵Great stuff in the new @BloombergNEF Zero-Emission Vehicles report:
1/ EV sales are ⬆️63% year-on-year about.bnef.com/blog/zero-emis… Image
🧵2/ New @BloombergNEF Zero-Emission Vehicles report:
Battery electrics 71% of sales, Plug-in hybrids 29%, you can guess where fuel cell vehicles end up about.bnef.com/blog/zero-emis… Image
🧵3/ New @BloombergNEF Zero-Emission Vehicles report:
EVs are 13% of sales, 9% pure electric, same as in 4Q 2021 about.bnef.com/blog/zero-emis… Image
Read 9 tweets
Sep 21, 2022
"We are in a period of unprecedented energy diversity, with many technologies with global average costs around $100/MWh competing for dominance." cell.com/joule/fulltext…
"The prices of fossil fuels such as coal, oil, and gas are volatile, but after adjusting for inflation, prices now are very similar to what they were 140 years ago, and there is no obvious long-range trend." cell.com/joule/fulltext…
"In contrast, for several decades the costs of solar photovoltaics (PV), wind, and batteries have dropped (roughly) exponentially at a rate near 10% per year." cell.com/joule/fulltext…
Read 4 tweets
Sep 20, 2022
Quick 🧵on @salesforce announced Net Zero Marketplace.
It raises a major (potentially existential) question for voluntary carbon markets: what is the rate-limiting step for 100x greater scale? salesforce.com/news/stories/s…
🧵2/ Is *carbon offsets availability* the rate-limiting step to 100x greater scale in voluntary carbon markets?
If so, that's a development/origination response: more developers, more places, with more access. salesforce.com/news/stories/s…
🧵3/ Is *carbon offsets quality* the rate-limiting step to 100x greater scale in voluntary carbon markets?
If so, that's a monitoring/verification/reporting response: better data, clearer protocols, more transparency salesforce.com/news/stories/s…
Read 7 tweets
Jul 6, 2022
15 years ago I joined a little clean energy information startup called New Energy Finance. Today, I'm expanding the remit a bit. It's very exciting.

Data reflections on 15 years of energy and technology change in a quick🧵follow
🧵1/ I joined New Energy Finance seven weeks before the first iPhone launched
🧵2/ Renewable energy investment would hit $120 billion in 2007 (up from $88 billion in 2006).
Investment in 2021 was more than $750 billion.
Read 11 tweets
Jul 6, 2022
Some news from me: 15 years ago, I joined a little UK startup called New Energy Finance. Now, I'm stepping into a new role for @BloombergNEF + @climate: more writing, less operations, and more engagement across the wide world of climate technology founders, funders, and builders.
So much has happened in climate tech and markets since 2007: orders of magnitude improvements in technology and orders of magnitude more deployment; $ trillions of investment and trade; industries changed, value created. Oh - and 30% of all anthropogenic CO2 emissions since 1751
What's next: more of the same, if you're a regular @climate reader; new things, if you're a @BloombergNEF client; and more projects and collaborations for anyone interested in bending our current climate curves, and shaping new positive ones too.
Read 5 tweets

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