Samsung SDI, LG Chem Face Setback in China on Electric-Car Batteries
June 21 2016 - 3:50AM
Dow Jones News
SEOUL—South Korea's two biggest electric-vehicle battery
makers—LG Chem Ltd. and Samsung SDI Co.—have failed to get battery
certifications from China, dealing a blow to their plans to expand
capacity in the world's largest auto market.
LG and Samsung, which control a third of the world's battery
market for electric vehicles, said Tuesday their recent
applications for certification have been rejected.
The decision by China's Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology means that electric cars that use LG or Samsung
batteries may be at risk of becoming ineligible for government
subsidies. Chinese authorities have recently said they're
considering limiting the state subsidies presently offered for the
purchase of electric cars to only those vehicles with certified
batteries from as early as 2018.
Without state subsidies, which can account for as much as 40% of
the price of an electric vehicle in China, battery suppliers will
have trouble finding buyers, analysts said.
Thirty-one Chinese battery makers that also applied for
certification in the same round have made it to the list.
LG and Samsung said they haven't been notified of the reasons
for their exclusion.
Both companies said they'll resubmit their applications later
this year.
"This is a big uncertainty for the Korean players in their EV
battery business in China," said Seoul-based NH Investment and
Securities analyst Hwang Yoo-sik.
The Chinese government has already suspended its once-generous
consumer subsidies for electric buses using batteries like the ones
Samsung, LG and other global players make—a combination of nickel,
cobalt, and manganese.
To increase their share of the rising electric-vehicle batteries
market, LG and Samsung have been counting on demand from China,
which last year made up a third of the global market.
The Chinese government aims to have five million electric cars
and buses on the road by 2020 as part of efforts to reduce both air
pollution and dependency on imported oil.
LG Chem and Samsung SDI each built a battery factory in the
eastern city of Nanjing and in Xian, in central China,
respectively, in October last year to start their full-fledged
advancement into the Chinese electric car market. The LG unit
produces batteries that can run 50,000 pure electric vehicles each
year while the Samsung factory can power 40,000 such vehicles
annually.
LG currently provides batteries to about 20 global makers of
electric vehicles, including General Motors Co., Ford Motor Co. and
Hyundai Motor Co. In China, the company counts SAIC Corp., China's
biggest car company, and Chery Automobile Co. as its clients.
Samsung's Chinese customers include Zhengzhou Yutong Bus Co. and
Beiqi Foton Motor Co.
SK Innovation Co., the flagship unit of Korea's third-largest
conglomerate, SK Group, said in April it is also considering
building an electric-vehicle battery plant in China, joining a
global race to expand capacity there.
Nomura expects the Chinese electric vehicle market to maintain
an annual volume growth of nearly 50% on average until 2020.
Write to In-Soo Nam at In-Soo.Nam@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
June 21, 2016 04:35 ET (08:35 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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