Volkswagen has hope to make electric cars cheaper: sodium batteries

Sodium-ion technology It has been promising for years without ever taking off. Gotion High-Tech, a Chinese company in which Volkswagen is its largest individual shareholder, has just taken the most serious step to date: for its own brand of sodium batteries to have a product ready to be manufactured at scale. An evolution is urgently needed. Lithium-ion batteries They have been dominating for decades the energy storage and mobility sector but they have an underlying problem that more and more companies want to tackle: lithium is a geographically concentrated resource, with fragile supply chains and dependent on a few countries. Sodium, on the other hand, is one of the most abundant elements on the planet. If sodium-ion technology reaches competitive energy densities and can be manufactured on a large scale, the game changes. And that is precisely what Gotion has in mind. Production-ready batteries. At its 15th Global Technology Conference, the company introduced the Gnascent brandwhich groups three versions of sodium-ion battery designed for specific applications, not a single multipurpose cell. The brand already has production lines ready in Tangshan and Hefei, China, and they are on the order of gigawatt-hours. Three versions. Each Gnascent variant targets a different niche: High energy: reaches 261 Wh/kg, 60% more than conventional sodium batteries. It is designed for light electric vehicles and drones for commercial use, where weight is a critical factor. Power: with 162 Wh/kg, it supports discharge at temperatures down to -50 °C. Its target market is commercial vehicles and equipment in extreme cold regions, where the performance of lithium batteries drops dramatically. Energy storage: with 180 Ah per cell and more than 20,000 useful life cycles, it maintains 88% of its capacity at -40 °C. The company claims to have passed penetration tests with 8 mm nails and heating to 400 °C without ignition. It can become a serious option for network installations and industrial use. What your technology is about. Just like account The company, Gnascent is backed by more than 90 patents covering cathode materials (sheet oxides, polyanions and sodium-manganese-iron pyrophosphate), hard carbon anodes and electrolyte additives. On the other hand, its anode-less design reduces material costs while increasing energy density. Who is behind. Gotion High-Tech, founded in 2006 and headquartered in Hefei, has Volkswagen Group as its largest shareholder. At the end of 2025, the company had a cumulative production capacity of 400 GWh and 20 manufacturing bases spread around the world. Just like share According to CarNewsChina, in the Chinese market it is the third supplier of batteries for electric vehicles, only behind CATL and BYD, with a share of 6.6%. Who climbs it first and best?. Gotion is not the only one on this path. CATL and BYD too are accelerating their own sodium ion programswhich points to a broader strategy in which this chemistry is the protagonist and ends up becoming a real alternative to lithium. And now what. For the moment, Gotion wants to enter the large-scale energy storage segment through Gnascent. That is electrical networks, industrial facilities or residential use, complementing with smaller markets such as two-wheeled vehicles. It only remains to be seen if the strategy ends up being given the green light and if more companies choose to consider this option in the near future. Cover image | Gotion High-Tech and Volkswagen In Xataka | Putting pistachio in everything has a limit. Or not: Córdoba already makes batteries with its shells

NAXTRA strongly bets on sodium as an alternative to lithium

Catl’s name may not sound to you if you don’t follow the world of the electric car closely, but we are talking about the main battery manufacturer worldwide. Tesla, Mercedes-Benz, BMW or Volkswagen are some of the giants who trust their products. Now, this Chinese colossus wants to go one step further. The focus is in sodium ion batteries, a technology that timidly presented in 2021 and now wants to boost on a large scale. Naxtra: The new battle horse. The next Catl movement is called Naxtra, its new sodium batteries line. The company plans to start mass production in the coming months, with an eye on its strategic partners and the global deployment of the product. Less lithium, more sodium. Sodium, more abundant and cheap than lithium, allows to reduce the dependence of the latter and strengthen the basis of new energy technologies. According to Ouyang Chuying, Catl R&D co -director, sodium ion batteries could have a cost advantage as the supply chain strengthens. A range, two solutions. Catl has developed two versions of its Naxtra batteries: one for passenger electric vehicles and a 24 V one with integrated Start-Stop system, designed for heavy trucks. Both are designed to perform in extreme conditions, from -40 ° C to +70 ° C. Extreme cold, the battery for cars maintains 90 % of its capacity. Even with only 10 % load, it retains stable performance at -40 ° C, without significant losses of power. Autonomy, cycles and security. The tourism version reaches an energy density of 175 Wh/kg, the highest recorded in sodium batteries, in line with LFP. It promises an autonomy of 500 km and more than 10,000 load cycles, which reduces maintenance costs remarkably. And, above all, it improves security. By eliminating combustion -prone materials, Catl claims to have gone from passive protection to intrinsic security. The sodium, by its own chemistry, has fewer fire risks in electric vehicles. Images | JUICE In Xataka | I have got on the denza Z9GT and I have clear one thing: this Chinese by -looking car looks at the face of many Europeans of 100,000 euros

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