Ford picks Johnson Controls Saft for PHEV batteries, adds 7 utility partners to test program

Click the plug-in hybrid Escape for a high res gallery
Ford has announced that when it starts building its first series production plug-in hybrid in 2012, the lithium ion battery packs will be supplied by Johnson Controls-Saft. JCS has already been supplying the prototype packs for current test fleet of PHEV Ford Escapes as well as packs for some of Ford's experimental vehicles such as the HySeries drive Ford Edge. Johnson Controls-Saft is also one of the two development battery suppliers for GM's Saturn Vue PHEV program which has been delayed to 2011. JCS will supply complete battery systems including the cooling and management electronics. Ford has committed to building a minimum of 5,000 plug-in hybrids annually for five years starting in 2012.
Until production launches, Ford will continue its field test program that started last year with EPRI and Southern California Edison. As Nancy Gioia told us last November at the LA Auto Show, eight additional utility and government partners are joining the test program. The broadened testing will allow Ford and its partners to further evaluate smart charging and vehicle to infrastructure communications.
Related:
- ABG First Impression: Ford Escape Plug-in Hybrid w/Video
- AutoblogGreen Drives the HySeries Ford Edge and fuel cell Explorer
- Ford's Nancy Gioia discusses hybrids and plug-ins
Gallery: ABG First Drive: Ford Escape PHEV
Gallery: Washington 2009: Ford Escape PHEV
[Source: Ford]
Photos Copyright ©2009 Sam Abuelsamid, Sebastian Blanco / Weblogs, Inc.


FORD, EPRI ADD 7 NEW UTILITY PARTNERS, BATTERY MAKER TO PLUG-IN HYBRID VEHICLE PROGRAM
* Seven electric utility providers are joining the Ford and Electric Power Research Institute plug-in hybrid electric vehicle program to conduct real world testing with Ford Escape PHEVs.
* Utility companies and a state research agency from New York, Ohio, North Carolina, Alabama, Georgia, Massachusetts and Michigan join testing and research already underway in California.
* Ford also announced a new partnership with Johnson Controls-Saft, which will supply a complete battery system for Ford's first production PHEVs in 2012.
* Ford's electric vehicle plan includes a family of hybrids, plug-in hybrids and battery electric vehicles by 2012.
WASHINGTON, D.C., Feb. 3, 2009 – Ford Motor Company today announced new details about its electric vehicle strategy, including the announcement of a new plug-in hybrid battery supplier and the addition of seven utility partners to a test program to speed the commercialization of plug-in hybrid electric vehicles.
Ford said it has entered into a partnership with battery producer Johnson Controls-Saft to develop advanced lithium-ion battery system to power Ford's first commercial plug-in hybrid (PHEV). At the same time, Ford said seven regional electric utility partners are joining Ford and the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI) to conduct real-world tests on an expanding fleet of Ford Escape PHEVs.
"As we move toward greater electrification of vehicles, we can achieve much more by working together toward a common goal," said Sue Cischke, Ford group vice president, Sustainability, Environment and Safety Engineering. "The work we are investing in today on both the vehicles and the connectivity to the nation's electric grid will pay off with real-world vehicles for customers in the very near future."
The partnerships will help Ford accelerate its electrification strategy, including bringing a full battery electric vehicle (BEV) van to market in 2010 for commercial use, a small BEV sedan developed jointly with Magna International by 2011 and a PHEV by 2012.
Ford is providing Escape PHEVs for real world road testing to its new research and utility partners around the country, including:
* New York Power Authority
* Consolidated Edison of New York
* American Electric Power of Columbus, Ohio
* Alabama Power of Birmingham, Ala.; and its parent, Atlanta-based Southern Company
* Progress Energy of Raleigh, N.C.
* DTE Energy of Detroit
* National Grid of Waltham, Mass.
* New York State Energy and Research Development Authority, a state agency.
Ford formed its first utility partnership with Southern California Edison in 2007.
EPRI, which is providing financial and logistical support for extensive new studies, formed the collaboration of utilities for the program. This allows EPRI and Ford, which first entered into a three-year agreement in March, to study regional differences and the impact on the electric grid as well as the vehicles.
"The data mined from these field tests will provide crucial information that will help us continue to make advances in battery technology, vehicle systems and customer usage," said Arshad Mansoor, EPRI vice president of Power Deliver and Markets. "This technical information will
lead to PHEV standards that will ultimately help automakers and utilities develop an efficient, convenient infrastructure and a seamless interface between the road and the power grid."
The research into PHEVs focuses on four primary areas: battery technology, vehicle systems, customer usage, and grid infrastructure. The companies also will explore the potential for stationary battery application and the value of energy storage.
"We are at the point where we need to work with the battery supply base, the utility industry and the government in order to find ways to make electrified vehicles an affordable proposition for consumers," Cischke said. "Plug-in hybrids hold great promise, but do still face significant obstacles to commercialization."
Ford was the first automotive manufacturer to partner with the utility industry in a shared effort to understand all of the issues related to PHEV technology and its interconnectivity with the electric grid.
"Bringing the seven additional utilities on board raises the program to a new level," said Mansoor. "We would expect the sharing and transfer of data among our newly expanded program will result in more robust data."
Drivers of the demonstration Ford Escape PHEV will make far fewer trips to the gas station. It uses common household current (120 volts) for charging, with a full charge of the battery completed within six to eight hours. When driven on surface streets for the first 30 miles following a full charge, the Ford Escape PHEV can achieve up to 120 mpg – roughly 4.5 times its traditional gas internal combustion engine-powered counterpart.
A fully charged Ford Escape PHEV operates in two modes, electric drive and blended electric/engine drive. It is not range-limited by the amount of charge available in the high-voltage lithium-ion battery. Once the charge in the battery has been depleted, the vehicle continues to operate as a fuel-efficient, standard Ford Escape Hybrid.
Battery supplier announced
Ford also announced today that Johnson Controls-Saft will supply the complete battery system for Ford's first production plug-in hybrid electric vehicles (PHEVs) beginning in 2012.
"The battery is the critical piece of electrifying vehicles," says Nancy Gioia, Ford director, Sustainable Mobility Technologies and Hybrid Vehicle Programs. "Johnson Controls-Saft is one of the leaders focused on creating lithium-ion batteries for an affordable new generation of vehicles."
The lithium-ion battery system that Johnson Controls-Saft is designing and manufacturing for Ford include cells, mechanical, electrical, electronic and thermal components. Initially the cells will be produced at the supplier's production facility in France, but the system will be assembled in the United States. The five-year supply agreement includes delivery for committed production in 2012 with a target of at least 5,000 units per year.
"As U.S. vehicle manufacturers commercialize their hybrid programs, the industry will be best served with a qualified and robust domestic supply base," said Alex Molinaroli, president of Johnson Controls Power Solutions. "Developing and manufacturing these components here also represents a significant opportunity to reduce U.S. dependence on foreign energy sources."
Class-leading hybrids
As part of its electric vehicle strategy Ford recently launched the all new Ford Fusion Hybrid and Mercury Milan Hybrid, doubling volume of Ford's hybrid lineup, which already includes the Ford Escape Hybrid and Mercury Mariner Hybrid, the world's most fuel efficient SUVs. The new midsize hybrid cars offer class-leading fuel economy of 41 mpg city driving, besting the Toyota Camry hybrid by 8 mpg in the city. The innovative new SmartGauge™ with EcoGuide in the Fusion and Milan coaches hybrid drivers to maximize fuel efficiency.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
Stan Wellaway 10:20AM (2/03/2009)
Still no mention of who Ford's partner is for the 2010 commercial van. Will that be announced at the car show in Chicago next week? Or at the Work Trucks show there in early March?
I see three possibilities.
1. Ford will partner with Smith Electric Vehicles (part of the Tanfield Group)
2. Ford will partner with someone else.
3. Ford will go it alone and build the van themselves.
Smith have a significant presence at the Truck Show next month. They are sponsoring the Green Vehicles zone, they have a speaker there (Mark Aubry, their US Sales chief), and are providing journalists with an opportunity to drive one or other of their truck range. The Smith Ampere is based on the Ford Transit Connect. The larger Smith Edison is based on the Ford Transit. In Europe both are dual-badged Ford-Smith, and the Ampere was displayed by Ford on its own stand at the CV-2008 show last April. See http://www.smithelectricvehicles.com
If Ford are partnering with someone else, it presumably isn't one of the companies already named - otherwise they would surely have said so already. But having surprised us with Magna, they could presumably surprise us with someone else. Previously they hinted at the partner being European
Having worked so closely with Smith/Tanfield for 2 years, maybe they now have enough experience to buy in the components and build the van themselves, providing valuable activity for an under-utilised workforce.
Place your bets!
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gorr 11:33AM (2/03/2009)
This goverment is as criminal with your new president as the one before. They decided to stop hydrogen technology by praising batteies plug-in + gasoline. This technology don't work good and cost a lot and is there just to 'help' save few fuel just for cars and will bankrupt car manufacturers because of the huge expences for putting that in production. Car manufacturers have voice all together in the past that the battery is the problems but have accepted to do so because of goverment pressure protecting toxic petrol use for all the earth and don't use neutral hydrogen that can replace petrol for cars, trucks, trains, ships, lawn mower, motorcycles, motocross, vtt, ski-doos, harleys choppers, radio-controlled small airplanes, go-karts, electrical generation, airplanes, agricol machinery, building heating, sewage treatment, bus, etc.
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