According to a Reuters analysis of publicly available data and projections made by these companies, the top automakers in the world intend to spend close to $1.2 trillion through 2030 to develop and produce millions of electric vehicles, along with the batteries and raw materials to support that production. The previously unpublished EV investment amount is significantly greater than previous Reuters investment estimates; it is more than twice as large as the most recent calculation that was released only a year ago.
To put the figure in context, Alphabet, the parent company of Google and Waymo, has a market cap of $1.3tn.
Car makers have forecast plans to build 54 million battery electric vehicles in 2030, representing more than 50 per cent of total vehicle production, according to the analysis.
To support that unprecedented level of EVs, carmakers and their battery partners are planning to install 5.8 terawatt-hours of battery production capacity by 2030, according to data from Benchmark Mineral Intelligence and the manufacturers.
Leading the charge is Tesla, where chief executive Elon Musk has outlined an audacious plan to build 20 million EVs in 2030, requiring an estimated three terawatt-hours of batteries.
Mr Musk, in late October, said Tesla is already working on a smaller vehicle platform targeted to cost half as much as the Model 3 and Model Y.
While Tesla has not fully disclosed its spending plans, such exponential growth — a 13-fold increase over the estimated 1.5 million vehicles it hopes to sell this year — will come at a cost of hundreds of billions of dollars, according to a Reuters analysis of Tesla’s financial disclosures and forecasts for global EV demand, and battery and battery mineral production.
Germany’s Volkswagen, while lagging behind Tesla, has ambitious plans through the end of the decade, targeting well over $100 billion to build out its global EV portfolio, add new battery “gigafactories” in Europe and North America and lock up supplies of key raw materials.
Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp is investing $70bn to electrify vehicles and produce more batteries and expects to sell at least 3.5 million battery electric models in 2030. It plans at least 30 different BEVs and expects to transition the entire Lexus range to battery electric over that span.
Ford Motor Co keeps boosting its spending level on new EVs — now at $50bn — and at least 240 gigawatt-hours of battery capacity with its partners as it aims to produce around three million BEVs in 2030 — half its total volume.
Mercedes-Benz has earmarked at least $47bn for EV development and production, nearly two-thirds of that to boost its global battery capacity with partners to more than 200 gigawatt-hours.
BMW, Stellantis and General Motors each plan to spend at least $35bn on EVs and batteries, with Stellantis laying out the most aggressive battery programme: a planned 400 gigawatt-hours of capacity with partners by 2030, including four plants in North America.