Xorte logo

News Markets Groups

USA | Europe | Asia | World| Stocks | Commodities



Add a new RSS channel

 
 


Keywords

2025-03-23 10:00:00| Fast Company

Filling an empty gas tank in an SUV might take five or six minutes. A new electric SUV from Chinas BYD can charge its battery in roughly the same amount of time, using one of the companys new EV chargers. Thats a major step forward. It is certainly a feat of engineering to design a battery that can handle this kind of charging speed, says John Helveston, an engineering management professor at George Washington University who studies technological change in China’s EV industry. Tesla does not have battery technology anywhere near this. (BYD’s charger has twice the power of Teslas latest supercharger.) The tech inside BYD’s newest cars, which will soon roll out, can handle 1,000 volts of power. The company’s new EV chargers, meanwhile, are designed to match that, so 249 miles of range can be added to a vehicle in five minutes. BYD now plans to build 4,000 of the new chargers across China. [Image: BYD] In the U.S., many consumers still say theyre hesitating to buy an electric car because of the time they take to charge. Of course, for daily use, many drivers could charge at home, and the range on current EVs is far greater than the typical commute to work. But until a shift happens in consumer perception of how to use a carand for longer-distance drives, or anyone who lives in an apartment without easy access to chargersbetter charging options could be crucial in helping EVs scale up more quickly. China is far ahead of the rest of the world on EV battery tech. “It’s the result of a series of different factors, including strong industrial policy support by China’s government to build out the upstream material supply chain for over a decade now,” says Helveston. (Trump’s current anti-EV policy, meanwhile, is likely to push the U.S. farther behind.) Innovative companies like BYD, he says, are also at the forefront of battery science. The technological development is happening incredibly quickly. “The comparison I hear is that if you have a new charging platform or a new battery chemistry, Volkswagen and BMW will say, ‘Well hustle to put this into our systems, and well put it in five years from now.’ Tesla might say, ‘Well hustle and get it in a year from now.’ China can say, ‘Well put it in three months from now, Dan Wang, a researcher of Chinas technology industry and a fellow at the Paul Tsai China Center at Yale Law School, recently told Heatmap. Installing new tech is also faster. “In China, it is much easier to get approvals and install chargers that can handle these kinds of high-power chargers more quickly, mostly because you only have one entity to work witha state-owned power company,” says Helveston. In the U.S., by contrast, installing high-powered chargers takes more coordination between different players, which means it takes more time and ends up costing more. Chargers that use so much power could put a strain on the electric grid if they’re not managed correctly. If everyone charges at the same time when they’re headed home from work, that could be a problem. On the other hand, if some people use an ultrapowerful charger in the middle of the day, that could actually help grids with extra solar power that might otherwise go unused. As with the charging tech itself, what’s happening with grid management in China could also be a model for the U.S. “Certainly, it is in general better and easier to manage if most EV owners slow charge over longer periods of time, but we are moving to a future where fast charging is just going to be part of the ecosystem,” says Helveston. “Given the level of innovation happening in China’s EV sector, I expect the Chinese grid to be able to develop the technology and processes to better handle these kinds of demands on the grid much more quickly than places like the U.S.”


Category: E-Commerce

 

Latest from this category

08.05His views better have changed since 2012: How a viral meme account beat the Vatican to the Pope Leo XIV news
08.05Step in and act where the government wont
08.05The deskless workforce will benefit from digital training 
08.05Chicagos own Pope Leo XIV is already drowning in deep-dish memes
08.05Krispy Kreme stock plunges nearly 30% as it ends dividends, pauses McDonalds expansion
08.05ACM Awards 2025: How to watch the Academy of Country Music Awards live online or on a smart TV for free
08.05The new pope, Leo XIV, has spoken out about urgent need for climate change action
08.05You can buy the new popes childhood home for $199,000
E-Commerce »

All news

09.05Q4 results today: Swiggy, Dr Reddy's among 68 companies to announce earnings on Friday
09.05Friday Watch
09.05How good is the UK trade pact for America?
09.05Asian stocks edge up on optimism about trade talks
09.05Can M&M maintain its growth momentum with new product launches?
09.05Bitcoin tops $100,000 on trade deal optimism
09.05Promoter ownership in India's top 500 companies hits record low of 49.5%
09.05SMBC set to snap up 20% in Yes; bank boards meet today
More »
Privacy policy . Copyright . Contact form .