A full battery in minutes: Stellantis to test electric vehicle battery swapping

Published Dec 8, 2023

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Will battery swopping for electric vehicles ever take off? Stellantis has an inkling that it might, and the carmaker is implementing a system to exchange batteries in a fleet of electric cars in Madrid from 2024.

The test, using technology from California startup Ample, will allow users of a car sharing fleet of Fiat 500e hatchbacks in the Spanish capital to switch out used EV batteries for fully charged ones in in less than five minutes.

"Battery swapping technology allows an EV customer who stops at a battery swapping station to have its depleted EV battery swapped out for a fully charged battery in a matter of minutes," said Stellantis, which owns the Fiat brand alongside a number of other European and US marques such Peugeot and Jeep.

Limited driving range and slow chargers are widely seen as deterring many consumers from buying electric vehicles.

"The combination of offering compelling electric vehicles that can also receive a full charge in less than five minutes will help remove the remaining impediments to electric vehicle adoption," Ample chief executive Khaled Hassounah said in a statement.

Ample said its automatic battery-swapping stations can be set up in public spaces in as little as three days, and could use a subscription model to reduce upfront costs for drivers.

The companies will work on integrating swappable batteries in other brands in Stellantis' stable, which also includes Chrysler, Citroen, Dodge and Maserati.

Stellantis aims to offer a fully electric line-up of vehicles in Europe by 2030.

Ample is not the first company to try swappable batteries.

California start-up Better Place launched a battery swapping scheme in Israel for Renault-Nissan vehicles, but Tesla's deployment of fast chargers saw the industry head in that direction and the company went under in 2013.

Chinese manufacturer Nio developed with Ampere a network of hundreds of battery swapping stations, with a couple dozen stations also in Germany, Norway and Sweden.

Chinese carmaker Geely, the parent company of Volvo and Lotus, joined the network at the end of November.

Battery swapping is also being developed for electric motorcycles and scooters.

Agence France-Presse

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electric cars