Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumBeyond Lithium: New Battery Tech Starts to Break Through
https://e360.yale.edu/features/energy-storage-sodium-solid-stateBy Nicola Jones July 8, 2026
The market for batteries these days is insatiable. Demand has grown more than fortyfold since 2010, thanks mainly to electric cars: Sales of EVs hit 20 million in 2025, or about a quarter of all cars sold globally. Shipping containers packed with batteries are also being called into play to store the electricity from renewables like solar. Storage capacity for solar farms has grown twentyfold in just five years.
This boom has fed a frenzy in battery research and development. In the past five years, innovation went very, very fast, says Teo Lombardo, a former battery chemist and now an analyst for the International Energy Agency. In 2024, over 40 percent of energy-related patents were on batteries. Thats never happened before. That tells you how quickly the market is evolving, and how much interest there is.
Lithium-ion batteries are todays gold standard for lightweight, high-powered energy storage for laptops, power tools, smartphones, drones, and electric cars. But now, says Lombardo, two new technologies are attacking lithium-ions dominance from either end of the cost spectrum: Cheap but bulky sodium batteries promise to run budget electric vehicles and help to power the grid; and expensive but powerful solid-state batteries offer long ranges for luxury EVs. Meanwhile, plenty of other battery chemistries are being tested in the lab, with hopes that new winners might eventually emerge to power the future.
The battery market is becoming so large that its not a matter of one technology replacing another, says Lombardo. Its about specializing to serve different parts of the market.
Crowman2009
(3,655 posts)Besides environmental concerns, I believe that cars should also not be prone to burst into flames.
OKIsItJustMe
(22,480 posts)Every day, millions of people drive vehicles with gas tanks, which (if Hollywood is to be believed) are prone to explode at the slightest provocation.
https://www.consumeraffairs.com/automotive/electric-car-fire-statistics.html
Updated 25 July 2024
The popularity of electric vehicles (EVs) in the U.S. has exploded in recent years, with millions of EVs registered nationally. However, some misconceptions about these vehicles and their safety remain, including perceptions that EVs are more likely to catch fire than gas-powered vehicles.
Though data on vehicle fires in the U.S. is limited, evidence from national studies in Europe and elsewhere suggest EV fires are actually rarer than fires involving other types of vehicles.
Australian firm EV FireSafe maintains a database of EV fire incidents that occur globally. It recorded fewer than 400 verified battery fires in passenger EVs between 2010 and June 2023.
In 2023, Swedens Authority for Social Protection and Preparedness (MSB) reported just 24 EV car fires in 2022, representing just 0.004% of the countrys 611,000 EVs.4 For cars running on gasoline or diesel fuel, the fire rate was 0.08%.
EV fires do make the news of course, partly because they are dramatic, but, more, because they are unusual. In 2024, according to DOT statistics, 39,254 "Motor Vehicle Traffic Fatalities" occurred. How many of them made the evening news?
justaprogressive
(7,417 posts)All those car chase crash fires? Usually Fake!
OKIsItJustMe
(22,480 posts)Gas tanks do explode (I saw it happen) however, the typical Hollywood scenario (sometimes with the explosion occurring with the car still in the air) is not reality.
Likewise, exploding EV batteries are rarer (statistically) than exploding gas tanks. (It happens, but rarely.) I suspect as the EV fleet ages the rate of fires due to electrical faults may increase, but, on the other hand, newer batteries are less flammable.