This article possibly contains original research. (December 2023) |
Gigafactory is a generic term that refers to a manufacturing facility where components and products associated with electrification and decarbonization technologies are produced.[citation needed]
The term was initially used by the electric vehicle manufacturer Tesla in 2013[1] to refer to the company's first major manufacturing facility outside of the original Tesla Fremont Factory in California. At the time the facility was going to be called "Gigafactory" and no location had been chosen. The completed facility is now called Gigafactory Nevada (or Gigafactory 1) because Tesla has now constructed several other large facilities in multiple countries.
For the first gigafactory, Tesla partnered with Panasonic to produce battery cells at the same facility where the vehicles would be manufactured,[2] creating economies of scale and improving control of the battery supply chain. By locating two major manufacturing facilities within the same structure, Gigafactory Nevada notably became the second-largest building in the world (by volume) once construction was complete.
More recent Tesla factories such as Gigafactory Berlin produce battery cells, battery packs, electric drivetrains, and other components which are incorporated into finished electric vehicle assemblies at the same facility using advanced robotics.[3] This level of vertical integration allows Tesla to produce vehicles more quickly and reduce its exposure to supply chain problems.[4] Conversely Gigafactory New York produces photovoltaic cells and Tesla Supercharger assemblies but does not produce batteries or vehicles, broadening usage of the term.
The term "gigafactory" has also been adopted by other companies which are involved in the manufacture of electric vehicles and other clean tech products. Established automobile manufacturers such as Jaguar Land Rover and Volkswagen now use the term to refer to their own electric vehicle factories.[5][6] Newer companies such as Stellantis have also embraced the term[7] by referring to four new "gigafactories" in France which will produce lithium-ion batteries for electric vehicles. Other companies such as Holosolis[8] and 3Sun,[9] which only produce solar cells and finished solar panel assemblies, also use the term "gigafactory" to refer to their facilities. The term is therefore understood[by whom?] to generically refer to large industrial facilities which are associated with the decarbonization and electrification trend.[citation needed]
Tesla Gigafactories
Gigafactory may specifically refer to the following Tesla factories:[10]
- Gigafactory Nevada in Storey County, Nevada, United States
- Gigafactory New York in Buffalo, New York, United States
- Gigafactory Shanghai in Shanghai, China
- Gigafactory Berlin-Brandenburg in Grünheide (Mark), Germany
- Gigafactory Texas in Austin, Texas, United States
- Gigafactory Mexico proposed factory in Santa Catarina, Nuevo León, Mexico
See also
- Britishvolt
- Tesla Factory, in Fremont, California, U.S.
- Tesla facilities in Tilburg, Netherlands
References
- ^ "What Is A Gigafactory?". InsideEVs. 3 December 2020. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
- ^ Frangoul, Anmar (6 July 2022). "VW and Goldman-backed battery maker Northvolt gets $1.1 billion funding injection". CNBC. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
Gigafactories are facilities that produce batteries for electric vehicles on a large scale
- ^ "Flying Through Giga Berlin". YouTube.
- ^ "Tesla moves to expand Gigafactory Berlin on new 250-acre land". 26 May 2022.
- ^ Partridge, Joanna (27 May 2022). "UK battles to keep Jaguar Land Rover's planned EV production". the Guardian. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
- ^ "ID. Buzz: Production start at German component locations". Volkswagen Newsroom. 16 June 2022. Retrieved 8 July 2022.
- ^ "Stellantis Electrification Transition in Full Swing with First ACC Battery Gigafactory Inaugurated in France".
- ^ "EIT InnoEnergy's Holosolis launches largest solar PV gigafactory in Europe | EIT".
- ^ "Italy expands Europe's first solar 'gigafactory'". 7 February 2023.
- ^ "Tesla Gigafactory - Tesla". www.tesla.com. Retrieved 8 July 2022.