Towards the lithium-ion battery production network: Thinking beyond mineral supply chains

Gavin Bridge (Corresponding author), Erika Faigen

Publications: Contribution to journalArticlePeer Reviewed

Abstract

The increasing role of electricity as an energy carrier in decarbonising economies is driving a growing demand for electrical energy storage in the form of battery systems. Two battery applications driving demand growth are electric vehicles and stationary forms of energy storage. Consequently, established battery production networks are increasingly intersecting with – and being transformed by – actors and strategies in the transport and power sectors, in ways that are important to understand. Most analyses of battery production adopt a supply chain approach, focussing on the flow and transformation of materials from primary production via manufacturing to final assembly. They pay only limited attention to organisational and geographical relations, and they overlook
critical areas of intersection between battery production and OEM manufacturing for automotive and power sectors. As a result, supply chain approaches do not fully account for emergent properties of battery production networks.
To remedy this, we deploy a global production network (GPN) approach that highlights the increasing intersection of battery manufacturing with the automotive and power sectors, informed by original research with
key respondents in battery R&D and commercialization at the collaborative interfaces of academia, industry and government. Our GPN approach augments conventional supply chain accounts based on battery manufacturing
in two ways: it identifies the economic and non-economic actors, network relations and multiple locations that constitute the global battery production network; and focuses on firm strategies of innovation, cooperation and
competition through which this network acquires its organisationally and geographically dynamic character, (specifically increasing inter-industry intersections), and the multifaceted role of the state. The paper concludes
by reflecting on the implications of this alternative account for understanding key areas of policy concern, and for analyses of the geopolitical economy of energy system transformation.
Original languageEnglish
Article number102659
Number of pages19
JournalEnergy Research & Social Science
Volume89
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Jul 2022
Externally publishedYes

Austrian Fields of Science 2012

  • 507026 Economic geography

Keywords

  • Energy storage
  • Energy system transformation
  • EV
  • Global production network (GPN)
  • Lithium-ion batteries (LiB)
  • Supply chain
  • HARVESTING LITHIUM
  • RISKS
  • POLITICAL-ECONOMY
  • FLOW
  • GEOPOLITICS
  • IMPACT
  • TECHNOLOGIES
  • GLOBAL PRODUCTION NETWORKS
  • METAL
  • REQUIREMENT

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