Setting an annual sales target of around 1 million zero-emission battery EVs and fuel-cell vehicles (FCVs) by 2030, the automaker said in order to achieve this it would need to make an investment of over $13 billion to develop and make batteries.
Toyota, the world's second-largest automaker by sales after Volkswagen, added it needed to accelerate the pace of battery development as tightening global vehicle emissions regulations would require a steep increase in manufacturing capacity for more powerful batteries.
"As a mass-market automaker, we need to expand our offering of electric cars," Executive Vice President Shigeki Terashi said at a briefing in Tokyo on Monday, adding that Toyota would introduce pure-battery models initially in China, followed by Japan, India, the United States and Europe.
Industry experts anticipate plug-in hybrid petrol-electric vehicles and all-battery EVs will account for as much as 26 percent of global car sales by 2030, versus just over 1 percent last year, data from the International Energy Agency shows.
Toyota has ramped up its EV development since last year when it announced it would add fully electric vehicles to its product lineup, surprising some industry players as it had long touted a green-car strategy focusing mainly on plug-in hybrid and FCVs.
Battery needs
Toyota expects electrified vehicles to account for around half of its global sales by 2030, when it also aims to sell 4.5 million petrol-electric and plug-in hybrid vehicles annually.
Volkswagen is aiming for 2-3 million electrified vehicle sales by 2025.
Last week, Toyota said it and partner Panasonic were considering developing next-generation EV batteries, including solid state batteries, while it has also tied up with Mazda and Suzuki on EVs.
At the moment, supply of EV batteries is dominated by a huddle of producers including LG Chem and Panasonic.
Terashi said joining forces with Panasonic may not be enough to meet its battery needs by 2030, and that Toyota was open to striking additional partnerships.
Producing batteries for so many EVs would pose a challenge "on a different dimension," said Terashi, who heads Toyota's EV business planning department.
"Even if we develop an advanced solid state battery, there's no way we could mass produce it on our own."
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