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Search resuls for: "Shoichiro Watanabe"


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The comments by Shoichiro Watanabe of Panasonic Energy are the Tesla (TSLA.O) supplier's first clear indication of the number of additional factories it will need. "We will need to build around another four factories," Watanabe, the company's chief technology officer, said in an interview at its headquarters in Osaka on Friday. He signalled an openness to potential joint ventures for EV battery production, with automaker Mazda Motor (7261.T) among others, citing the changing nature of such projects in which investment is no longer shouldered by battery makers alone. Panasonic will not rule out the possibility of a joint battery venture with Mazda as part of a supply partnership the companies are working out, Watanabe said. They aim to sign off on it this year, and expect to supply batteries after 2025.
Persons: Shoichiro Watanabe, Miho Uranaka, Watanabe, Elon Musk, Miho Uranka, Daniel Leussink, David Dolan Organizations: Panasonic Energy Co, REUTERS, Panasonic, Reuters, Panasonic Energy, EV, Mazda, NORTH AMERICA Panasonic, U.S, Thomson Locations: Moriguchi, Osaka prefecture, Japan, Miho Uranaka OSAKA, United States, Nevada, Kansas, Osaka, North America, Oklahoma
Details about Tesla's Cybertruck battery strategy, including use of 4680 cells and consideration of other options, have not been reported. The Tesla-designed 4680 cell - so named for its external dimensions (46mm diameter, 80mm length) - is crucial to future production plans. Last year, LG said it planned to open a new 4680 production line at its Ochang plant in Korea in the second half of 2023. Tesla also has been installing first-generation 4680 cells with "wet" cathodes in so-called structural packs in Texas-built Model Ys. Tesla plans to use a cathode with more than 90% nickel in the next generation of 4680 cells, two sources said.
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