Auto parts makers shine spotlight on aluminium's role in electric vehicles
An automated body welding line for electric cars is seen at Volkswagen's Zwickau assembly plant in Zwickau, Germany (Images source: Internet)
Previously shunned in favour of cheaper steel, aluminum consumption in electric vehicles is expected to accelerate over coming years as COVID-19 hastens the move to a green economic recovery.
Significantly lighter than steel, aluminum is now the metal of choice in a range of parts - the chassis, structural components such as the shock tower and internal panels to housing for motors and the batteries that power electric cars.
Aluminum producers such as Rusal, Rio Tinto and Glencore with access to large amounts of metal are set to benefit. Not as well known, but also in pole position are firms making the components. They include Mexico’s Nemak, Canada’s Linamar and France-based Constellium. Sitting on both sides is Norsk Hydro, which produces aluminum metal and parts for autos.
“The electric vehicle segment is the bright spot in the automotive segment, currently 20% of sales volume is going to e-mobility and the tendency is increasing,” said Egil Hogna, head of Extruded Solutions at Norsk Hydro.
Aluminum is now the metal of choice in a range of car parts (Images source: Internet)
Hydro delivers more than 350,000 tonnes of aluminum products to the auto industry every year, with rough estimates showing around 15% of that going to electric vehicles. It allocated 30% of its auto investment budget within its Extruded Solutions division to products for electric vehicle customers this year and expects annual growth of 20% in some parts of its aluminum product business between 2020 and 2024. Many of these customers are in Europe and China, which recently announced measures favouring electric vehicles.
JUST CHANGE THE BUMPER
Aluminum’s popularity is coming at the expense of steel. Steel firms that supply the auto industry include Tata Steel, ArceloMittal, Nippon Steel, Posco and Nucor.
Access to the opportunities created by aluminum does, however, come at a cost. Aluminum prices are typically about three times that of steel. But the industry is prepared to accept the price difference due to the sheer scale of potential sales, an executive involved in the auto supply chain said. “It’s been a long incubation period, but electric vehicles are swinging the pendulum. Aluminum is a higher performing material than steel.”
Aluminum weighs about one-third of steel per cubic foot, enabling “lightweighting” of electric vehicles and superior performance in terms of the distance travelled before batteries need to be recharged. “Aluminium better protects passengers and the structure of the car in a crash situation, the Crash Management System absorbs the energy created,” said Paul Warton, president of Constellium’s Automotive Structures and Industry Business. “When you have an impact you don’t destroy the car, you just change the bumper.”
Aluminium better protects passengers and the structure of the car in a crash situation (Images source: Internet)
Constellium cited the example of a contract with a European firm to provide aluminum door sills and crash management systems for electric vehicles, worth 175 million euros ($206 million), the second quarter of next year as an example of the changing trend.
CRU analyst James Wren estimates the average amount of aluminum used in electric vehicles is 30% higher than internal combustion engine cars. “Aluminium battery housing is what many companies want to capitalise on, it’s going to be a big market,” Wren said.
One of these companies is Nemak, which started to produce battery housing five years ago and now s German and North American auto makers among its customers. “To-date Nemak has been awarded contracts to produce aluminum structural and e-mobility components worth about $830 million annually – in turn, this segment could represent around 20% of the company’s total revenue by 2023, once this business is ramped up,” said Nemak’s Chief Executive Armando Tamez.
Many of the companies that make aluminum products for autos still focus on ICE vehicles, but their plant and equipment can easily be reconfigured for electric vehicle components.
The estimate for aluminum demand for electric vehicles is for 2.4 million tonnes in 2025 (Images source: Internet)
“Light weight cast structural components and housings for the electric motor are really interesting growth areas for Linamar as is the battery tray; quite a complex part with very intricate passageways to help cool the battery pack,” said Linamar Chief Executive Linda Hasenfratz. Linamar estimates the global market for aluminum products for the auto industry could total more than $250 billion a year assuming production of 80 million vehicles. Numbers for how much aluminum metal will be needed overall to feed the electric vehicle industry vary.
Wood Mackenzie’s base case estimate for aluminum demand for electric vehicles is for 2.4 million tonnes in 2025, 3.3% of total primary demand and nearly double the number for this year. For 2040, its analysts expect demand at 9.4 million tonnes or 12% percent of the total. “The big game is automotive sheet used for body panels and structures,” said Wood Mackenzie analyst Julian Kettle. “The problem with automotive sheet is it mostly uses primary aluminum as every car manufacturer has his own specification.”
Source: https://www.reuters.com/article/us-aluminium-electric-autos-analysis-idUSKCN24S1QM