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LG Chem invests another $1 bn to ramp up battery capacity in China

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LG Chem invests another $1 bn to ramp up battery capacity in China
2019.01.10 13:34:28 | 2019.01.10 13:35:31
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LG Chem Ltd.`s EV battery plant in Nanjing, China. [Photo provided by LG Chem Ltd.]

South Korea’s top secondary battery maker LG Chem Ltd. pledged additional investment of 1.2 trillion won ($1 billion) to ramp up secondary battery capacity in China to ensure economies of scale ahead of explosive demand to power from small gadgets to moving smart vehicles.

LG Chem said Thursday that it signed a deal with the Nanjing city government of China to invest 600 billion won each in its first EV battery plant and small-sized battery plant located in the Nanjing Economical & Technological Development Zone, by 2020. The company said the investment is to actively respond to the fast-growing demand for batteries powering electric cars as well as non-IT products such as power tools and wireless vacuum cleaners.

The latest expansion plan of its battery production facilities in China comes just six months after the company announced to build a second battery plant in Binjiang Development Zone in Nanjing, China at an investment of around $1.9 billion in stages by 2023. The company broke ground for the second battery manufacturing plant in the country that is expected to produce more than 500,000 units of high-performing EV batteries.

The leading Korean battery market has been making bold moves to scale up its battery production capacity on expectations that demand for both EV and non-IT batteries would grow in explosive pace.

The global EV market size is expected to reach 22 million units by 2025 from 6.1 million units in 2019 to make up more than one-fifth of the global car market, according to SNE Research, a market researcher on renewable energy. The demand for small-sized cylinder-type battery packs that are typically used in electric tools, golf carts, and bicycles is also growing sharply. The demand for cylinder-type batteries worldwide is estimated at 6 billion units this year, nearly tripled from 2.3 billion units in 2015, according to market research B3.

LG Chem’s latest investment underscores the company’s sense of anxiety against China’s ascension and dominance in the secondary battery market backed by Beijing support. According to SNE Research’s data, LG Chem’s share in the global secondary battery market stood at 8.0 percent as of the end of November last year, down 1.8 percentage points from a year-ago period. The company ranked fourth in the world with its EV battery shipments of 6.19 gigawatt-hours (GWh) in January-November last year, which grew by 42.2 percent, far below the industry’s average of 72.8 percent.

LG Chem’s investment in China has also picked up speed after the National Development Reform Commission that oversees investment in the auto sector last year resumed issuing permits to foreign makers enabling them to expand capacity to draw more foreign investment after a halt. Sales by LG Chem and other Korean battery makers in China, the world’s largest EV market, fell sharply after Beijing had excluded Korean names in its EV subsidy program in a measure believed to promote domestic players for a while.

LG Chem hopes it can run its second plant in China in full capacity once Beijing phases out EV subsidies by 2021.
 
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we should ban these inevestments include samsung's recently battery factory investment.CATL and BYD already built enough battery factory
 
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we should ban these inevestments include samsung's recently battery factory investment.CATL and BYD already built enough battery factory

It is good to have quality investment and competition. Especially if the investment comes from China's near periphery. These are tantamount to a regional economic community build-up.
 
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It is good to have quality investment and competition. Especially if the investment comes from China's near periphery. These are tantamount to a regional economic community build-up.
they do not bring any quality in battery tech. as to competition. we need competition from friendly country or at lest not so anti china.we have given these koreas whatever N.K or S.K too much.they are parasites on our body. and they are ultra anti china
 
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we have given these koreas whatever N.K or S.K too much.they are parasites on our body. and they are ultra anti china

I have a Korean student studying in Mainland with whom I cooperate to write a paper. He is super pro-China.

We can make brushing statements. Also, we need to distinguish between people and governments.

Historically, Mainland China has received most investment from overseas Chinese communities, China's non-Mainland parts (like Taiwan) and Northeast Asian countries.
 
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we have given these koreas whatever N.K or S.K too much.they are parasites on our body
I have a Korean student studying in Mainland with whom I cooperate to write a paper. He is super pro-China.

We can make brushing statements. Also, we need to distinguish between people and governments.

Historically, Mainland China has received most investment from overseas Chinese communities, China's non-Mainland parts (like Taiwan) and Northeast Asian countries.
beware. one person means nothing. s.k as a whole are very anti china
 
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beware. one person means nothing. s.k as a whole are very anti china


It is just historical anomaly and political in nature. Otherwise, two two nation would not be each other's (one of the) largest investors and tourist destinations.

I do not see non-East Asian investment in Mainland China having better intentions than East Asian investment. At least we share so many in common with East Asian (especially NEA) neighbors.
 
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It is just historical anomaly and political in nature. Otherwise, two two nation would not be each other's (one of the) largest investors and tourist destinations.

I do not see non-East Asian investment in Mainland China having better intentions than East Asian investment. At least we share so many in common with East Asian (especially NEA) neighbors.
seems you are very happy when parastise is drink your blood.
 
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seems you are very happy when parastise is drink your blood.

Where is the parasite?

It is investment in high-tech and heavy industry. They spend money to build factory, hire workers, bring in expertise, and compete.

I would rather them to come and take up market share than any other foreigners. You may call me Pan-Asian for that.

It is not like Coca Cola investing to poison you or McDonalds selling propriety rights with no practical contribution to the society.
 
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