Obama Announces List of Grant Recipients, Recognizing Significance of Hybrid Markets [View article]
Thanks for the link, that is a great data point. However, it looks like its an expected future number for Furukawa's technology. Do you know any information on Axion's or about current/near term pricing for any player?
Thanks for the steady stream of info.
On Aug 06 08:05 AM John Petersen wrote:
> ccm26, in a recent article I included a slide from a presentation > by Patrick Moseley, president of the Advanced Lead Acid Battery Consortium > that pegged the expected price of lead-carbon batteries in the $260 > per kWh range. See: > > seekingalpha.com/artic... > > > The lead carbon grants are very curious because they both specify > the manufacturing partners, the technology partners and technologies > to be used. Exide with Axion will be using Axion's lead-carbon electrode > technology and East Penn will be using the CSIRO split electrode > Ultrabattery technology. Axion just put out a press release that > it has not heard directly from the DOE yet, so presumably all the > details will be worked out over the next couple months. The relationship > with Exide is apparently moving forward apace.
Obama Announces List of Grant Recipients, Recognizing Significance of Hybrid Markets [View article]
I keep hearing you refer to advanced lead acid technologies like Axion's as "cheap". Have any of the players given an indication of what their pricing will be, say $/kWh or $/kW?
Obama Announces List of Grant Recipients, Recognizing Significance of Hybrid Markets [View article]
Thanks for the steady stream of info.
On Aug 06 08:05 AM John Petersen wrote:
> ccm26, in a recent article I included a slide from a presentation
> by Patrick Moseley, president of the Advanced Lead Acid Battery Consortium
> that pegged the expected price of lead-carbon batteries in the $260
> per kWh range. See:
>
> seekingalpha.com/artic...
>
>
> The lead carbon grants are very curious because they both specify
> the manufacturing partners, the technology partners and technologies
> to be used. Exide with Axion will be using Axion's lead-carbon electrode
> technology and East Penn will be using the CSIRO split electrode
> Ultrabattery technology. Axion just put out a press release that
> it has not heard directly from the DOE yet, so presumably all the
> details will be worked out over the next couple months. The relationship
> with Exide is apparently moving forward apace.
Obama Announces List of Grant Recipients, Recognizing Significance of Hybrid Markets [View article]