Samsung SDI unit signs $1.4 billion LFP battery deal for US customer


A general view of the Samsung SDI battery factory in God, Hungary, December 12, 2022. REUTERS/Marton Monus

SEOUL, Dec 10 (Reuters) - South Korea's Samsung SDI said on Wednesday that its unit Samsung SDI America has signed a deal to supply lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries to a U.S. energy infrastructure development and operations company.

The contract is valued at more than 2 trillion won ($1.36 billion), Samsung SDI said in a statement, adding that deliveries will run for three years starting in 2027.

The company did not name the customer.

The prismatic LFP batteries to be supplied under the deal will be manufactured by converting existing production lines at Samsung SDI’s U.S. plant, the battery maker said.

Samsung SDI, which is jointly building and operating an electric vehicle battery plant with Stellantis to target the U.S. EV market, said it has been shifting some production lines to energy storage system batteries in response to changes in local demand.

Energy storage batteries have a similar chemistry to automotive batteries and are used to power facilities such as data centres.

South Korean battery makers are repurposing EV battery production lines to also produce energy storage systems as they face the phasing out of U.S. subsidies.

($1 = 1,468.9400 won)

(Reporting by Heekyong YangEditing by Ed Davies)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Next In Tech News

AI machine sorts clothes faster than humans to boost textile recycling in China
Anthropic rushes to limit leak of Claude Code source code
Seeking a sounding board? Beware the eager-to-please chatbot.
Crisis contractor for OpenAI, Anthropic eyes a move to combat extremism
Meet the new AI coworker who won’t stop snitching to your boss
EU, US to tackle digital frictions through talks
Perplexity AI machine accused of sharing data with Meta, Google
The AI video apps gaining ground after OpenAI declared�Sora dead
Advocacy groups urge YouTube to protect kids from 'AI slop' videos
WhatsApp says Italian surveillance company tricked around 200 users into downloading spyware

Others Also Read