General Motors and Redwood Materials are extending their battery partnership with a second-life energy storage project in Michigan. Around 100 repurposed GM

The carmaker scaled back electric vehicle plans, but is going all in on advanced batteries, including a new sodium-ion chemistry designed for large-scale power storage.

GM partnered with Peak Energy on sodium-ion batteries and expanded its Redwood Materials deal to supply energy storage for data centres and the grid.

GM is developing an entirely new sodium-ion battery chemistry for use in everything from data centers to its own factories.

GM is expanding efforts to capitalize on the expected growth of energy storage and data centers and the development of next-generation sodium-ion batteries.

US automaker will produce cells to help build supply chain less dependent on China

General Motors is the first automaker to work with Redwood Materials across every stage of the battery lifecycle — scrap recovery, end-of-life recycling, and now repurposed energy…

General Motors partners with Peak Energy to develop sodium-ion batteries for data centers and grid storage, with GM holding exclusive manufacturing rights.

General Motors partners with Peak Energy to develop sodium-ion batteries for grid-scale energy storage, with GM retaining exclusive manufacturing rights.

GM announcement enables utilities to tap 250k+ bidirectional EVs as grid storage, enough to power 120k homes for a week.

GM developing sodium-ion for grid storage with Peak Energy for lower-cost, passively cooled systems using abundant US materials.

US-based energy storage firm Peak Energy has entered into a strategic partnership with automotive giant General Motors (NYSE:GM) to develop and deploy next-generation sodium-ion…

General Motors and Redwood Materials are extending their battery partnership with a second-life energy storage project in Michigan. Around 100 repurposed GM

General Motors (GM) has partnered with sodium-ion battery storage startup Peak Energy to target the grid-scale energy storage market.

Detroit automaker partners with Peak Energy to try a saltier route to energy storage

GM and Peak Energy are developing sodium-ion batteries that they say can cut grid storage costs by 20% and boost uptime.

General Motors is considering using an unproven, but possibly more powerful, battery technology for its electric vehicles. The stock is up.

GM announced this week a partnership with Peak 'Energy that will bring sodium-ion battery technology to more energy storage facilities.