Study: EV battery prices to drop by 50% by 2026

Study: EV battery prices to drop by 50% by 2026

EV battery prices have been falling, and they could decline even more steeply over the next two years, according to a new Goldman Sachs report.

On the pack level, global average battery prices declined from $153 per kwh in 2022 to $149 in 2023, according to the report, which predicts that they’ll continue dropping to $80 per kwh by 2026. That’s almost 50% lower than 2023, and past the point where EVs achieve price parity with gasoline cars, analysts estimate.

Goldman Sachs EV battery price forecast October 2024

Goldman Sachs EV battery price forecast October 2024

Analysts attribute continually-decreasing battery prices to two main factors. One is technological advancements, specifically larger cells and cell-to-pack tech that lower the number of battery modules or eliminate them completely. This could help not only lower costs, but achieve up to 30% higher energy density that could keep battery-pack size in check, analysts believe. Tesla has moved to produce its own large-format 4680 cells, but has had trouble keeping manufacturing costs of those cells down.

The other factor is a downturn in the prices of raw materials like lithium and cobalt. Higher raw-material prices contributed to soaring EV battery costs in 2022, but that’s declining and will continue to decline through at least 2030, representing about 40% of anticipated battery cost reductions, according to Goldman Sachs.

Comparing 4680 vs. 2170 - Panasonic

Comparing 4680 vs. 2170 – Panasonic

This follows another report from Goldman Sachs earlier this year predicting a 40% drop in EV battery costs between 2023 and 2025, which analysts said could boost sales, potentially allowing EVs to claim 50% of the U.S. market by 2030.

Despite the blip of pandemic-adjacent supply-chain issues, EV battery prices have steadily decreased since the modern EV era kicked off with the arrival of the Tesla Roadster about 15 years ago. Prices have dropped 90% since that time, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

Author: EVAI

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