VW and Toshiba Explore Partnership for New Family of Small EVs

Volkswagen Up range

By Thami Masemola
February 12, 2009 10:47 PM
Filed Under: Corporate/Financial, Electric Vehicle, German, Japanese, Volkswagen

The bigwigs in the automotive industry have begun going about choosing partners to assist them manufacture their future electric vehicles. Volkswagen AG is one such company and it has chosen Japanese electronics giant Toshiba Corporation as its partner in developing battery systems for its future electric vehicles. These batteries will have a high specific energy density.

According to Dr Martin Winterkorn the chairman of the board of management at Volkswagen AG, his company aims to be the first to provide large-scale production electric vehicles that are affordable and provide emissions-free motoring.

"Volkswagen is forging ahead with the development of future drive technologies in many different areas," said Dr Winterkorn. "In order to further strengthen our position, Volkswagen is investing in the long term and is offering cooperation projects to other companies. One of the important components in this context is the cooperation with Toshiba. I am convinced that this will be a major step forward towards the development of series production electric vehicles for our customers."

The area in which the two companies and other partners will focus mostly on is the field of lithium-ion battery technology where much more research and development work still needs to be done.

 

Source: VW

Press Release (Click to expand)

Volkswagen and Toshiba sign letter of intent

Professor Winterkorn: A move forwards in the development of electric vehicles

Volkswagen AG (Wolfsburg) and the Toshiba Corporation (Tokyo) have signed today a letter of intent in Wolfsburg. The objective is a cooperation for the development of electric drive units and the accompanying power electronics for Volkswagen's planned New Small Family. Furthermore, Volkswagen and Toshiba are planning the development of battery systems with a high specific energy density for the next generation of electric vehicles.

The chairman of the board of management at Volkswagen AG, Prof. Dr Martin Winterkorn, emphasised: "Volkswagen is forging ahead with the development of future drive technologies in many different areas. In order to further strengthen our position, Volkswagen is investing in the long term and is offering cooperation projects to other companies. One of the important components in this context is the cooperation with Toshiba. I am convinced that this will be a major step forward towards the development of series production electric vehicles for our customers." Volkswagen's objective, he said, is to be the first manufacturer to provide an emissions-free, affordable and safe large-scale production electric vehicle. "A considerable amount of research and development work still has to be carried out until we can produce the electric vehicle, in the field of lithium-ion battery technology in particular and this is an area in which the Volkswagen Group is working with further potential technological partners alongside Toshiba ", stated Prof. Dr Winterkorn.

The letter of intent was signed by Prof. Dr Winterkorn and Atsutoshi Nishida, president and chief executive officer of the Toshiba Corporation. Nishida said: "We look forward to building up a mutually beneficial partnership with Volkswagen, a clear leader in the automotive industry making strong initiatives in the development of environmentally-friendly cars. The combined know-how of the two international technology groups Volkswagen and Toshiba will be an important step towards the drive technologies of tomorrow." He continued that this is a good signal for mobility based on ecology and economy.

Comments

giga-games
February 12, 2009 11:06 PM
there could be a good partnership between germany and japan :D

Bristol411S3
February 12, 2009 11:25 PM
I wish they'd hurry up with the Up!

jagervw
February 12, 2009 11:39 PM
VW needs an electric car!

WildMaverick1200
February 13, 2009 12:08 AM
I'm glad they're focusing on battery technology. If that doesn't improve, then EVs are just a wild dream.

Iconic
February 13, 2009 2:06 AM
Battery technology is already here, now it's just a matter of making it cheap and viable for widespread use. Toyota and Nissan have already been partnered up with their technology partners to put out a proper battery. If we consider the progress of technology in general, I think we can expect a cheap system within a few years. A lot sooner than a cheap Hydrogen infrastructure. Ultimately, politics will determine which wins.

BabyMilo
February 13, 2009 1:03 PM
those concepts are so cool looking, they should put them into production asap and not change the design

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