CompaniesPREMIUM

US firm aims to power European stadiums with used electric-car batteries

Eaton is in talks with various players and expects the market to grow up to 20 times by 2022

A general view of the Bislett stadium in Oslo, Norway June 21, 2019.  Picture: REUTERS/LEFTERIS KARAGIANNOPOULOS
A general view of the Bislett stadium in Oslo, Norway June 21, 2019. Picture: REUTERS/LEFTERIS KARAGIANNOPOULOS

Oslo — US industrial conglomerate Eaton, which uses secondhand Nissan electric vehicle batteries to power buildings, is in talks with up to six European football stadiums to help power their facilities, according to a senior executive.

Eaton, a New York-listed firm that makes hydraulics, truck transmissions and other industrial products, says the market is niche but expects it to grow up to 20 times between now and 2022.

In Europe, Middle East, and Africa, Eaton estimates the potential market value to be $2.3bn by 2025.

What to do with the used batteries of electric vehicles is becoming a growing concern as their use expands with that of electric cars, which accounted for 1.5% of the 86-million cars sold globally in 2018, according to researchers JATO Dynamics.

Eaton takes the cells from the batteries of Japanese carmaker Nissan’s returned Leaf electric vehicles and repackages them into new units, a product it calls xStorage, to store power in buildings, both industrial and residential.

It has already equipped the Netherlands’s Johan Cruyff Arena, the legendary home of the Ajax football team, among other buildings, with what it calls “second-life batteries”. Its latest project was in Oslo’s Bislett athletics stadium in Norway, which is partly powered by solar panels.

“The football stadium community is interested. From significant ones, [we are talking] with five to six stadiums in Europe,” Eaton's senior-vice president Craig McDonnell said in an interview on the sidelines of a presentation at Bislett stadium.

With the exception of Tesla, which it sees as a competitor in the storage business, the firm is also talking with other carmakers to expand its offering. McDonnell declined to give names.

Eaton says its xStorage solution is 20% cheaper than a new battery and every Nissan Leaf car can produce four such units.

It is among the large-scale commercial ones in the developing market, with other projects run by German carmaker BMW, which supplies secondhand batteries from its i3 electric vehicles to store wind-farm-produced electricity.

Reuters

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