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Battery darling Our Next Energy lands massive $300M Series B to build gigafactory

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Our Next Energy battery pack travels down the production line.
Image Credits: Our Next Energy

Battery startup Our Next Energy announced this morning that it closed a massive $300 million Series B in an effort to get its $1.6 billion gigafactory up and running.

The new round values the company at $1.2 billion post-money, marking a stunning rise for the two-and-a-half-year-old company, which closed a $25 million Series A in October 2021 and a $65 million Series A1 in March 2022.

Founded by Mujeeb Ijaz — a veteran of Ford, A123 Systems and Apple’s automotive effort — ONE has focused its efforts on finding low-cost, highly available materials for its battery chemistries. The gigafactory in question will pump out lithium-iron-phosphate cells, better known as LFP.

Ijaz told TechCrunch that the first 2 gigawatt-hours of capacity at its Michigan plant will come online by the end of next year, and the remaining 18 gigawatt-hours will be added in stages over the following three years.

The new round was led by Fifth Wall and Franklin Templeton, and it was joined by growth equity investors Temasek, Riverstone Holdings and Coatue; venture investors AI Capital Partners and Sente Ventures; and ONE’s Series A investors, including Breakthrough Energy Ventures, Assembly Ventures, BMW i Ventures and Volta Energy Technologies. Also joining the round are two unnamed strategic investors, “a manufacturer of EV technology solutions and a renewable energy provider,” the company said.

Franklin Templeton’s addition is notable because it represents a shift from straight venture to including growth equity. With the investment, the firm gains a seat on the board and could become a source of debt for ONE’s equipment purchases. “We’re actually seeing that as the beginning of a long-term relationship that will go past Series B into Series C and potentially as we go public,” Ijaz said.

ONE’s move into at-scale manufacturing comes as the U.S. battery industry is newly emboldened by the Inflation Reduction Act, which offers substantial incentives for companies to develop domestic supply chains and production. As a result, U.S. battery startups have begun to embrace their role not just as R&D shops that license their technology but as manufacturers competing with largely Asia-based giants like LG Energy Solution, CATL and SK Innovation.

While ONE has gained significant government backing, including $220 million in grants from the state of Michigan, the decision to build an LFP gigafactory isn’t without risk. While LFP was invented in the U.S., most of the production today takes place in China.

That’s in part because pioneering battery company A123 Systems bet big on the chemistry only to see the market for its cells evaporate. That sent the company into bankruptcy, where it was purchased for a song by a major Chinese auto parts company. Chinese companies also swept in and bought the rights to many LFP-related patents, several of which only expired last year.

After the successful launch of the Tesla Model S, LFP cells were unable to deliver the range consumers expected and fell out of favor in the U.S. and Europe. Over the last decade, Chinese companies have developed vast factories that can crank out cells at low prices.

In some ways, ONE’s gigafactory endeavor echoes that of A123, and that story didn’t end well. I asked Ijaz, who was an executive at the company during its rise and following its sale in bankruptcy, whether he thought this time would go any differently.

“I’ve thought a lot about this as I went through that experience very closely,” he said. “I think there are four differences.”

For one, the electric vehicles that A123 was targeting could only travel 120 to 150 miles. “The market wasn’t very responsive to that type of product. We are past that point.” Many EVs today are purpose-built and use far more advanced batteries, he added, boosting range and driving consumer demand.

“The second difference is that the U.S. government has made a concerted effort to develop a condition for North American suppliers to take root. We didn’t have that benefit in the past,” he said. “The Inflation Reduction Act gives us a $53 per kilowatt-hour total advantage against other suppliers globally. I believe that we’re now in a level playing field of competitive advantage, and that condition never existed before.”

Third, he said, was the recent rapid development of the grid-scale storage market that’s frequently paired with cheap renewable power. “We’re seeing the birth of a very new vertical that’s deep in its capability to absorb a lot of energy storage.” He said the company will be announcing a grid-scale storage product soon.

Lastly, Ijaz is bullish on the prospects for a domestic supply chain. The Inflation Reduction Act will play a key role in that, but he also emphasized the disruptive nature of the pandemic and other geopolitical instabilities (Russia’s war in Ukraine, for example). “Localization has never been more certain in my mind.”

ONE is leasing the building for the gigafactory, and $250 million of the new funding and grant money will go toward outfitting it for production. Early cells will use materials from the global market, and after a couple of years, Ijaz said ONE will probably start shifting over to materials from free-trade countries, which will help the company’s cells qualify for further incentives. Fully domestic LFP batteries are probably about seven years out, he said.

Eventually, those cells will be paired with manganese-based cells to enable a dual-chemistry battery pack that promises to provide an exceptionally long range. Ijaz said that the company has been testing cells with 75% manganese and 25% nickel, and the results are promising. The cells can take more lithium than equivalent nickel-cobalt cells, and they don’t need graphite anodes, which together give the cells higher energy density. ONE’s new gigafactory will have a separate line that will make LFP and manganese cells for automakers and other customers to evaluate.

Running all that equipment will be over 2,000 employees. Since the U.S. doesn’t have a deep bench of battery engineers or technicians, ONE will have to train many of them. The startup is receiving workforce development funding from Michigan, the Department of Energy and Argonne National Laboratory to help defray the costs of the four-month training period.

Altogether, it’s a big endeavor, one that comes with a certain amount of risk, government support notwithstanding. “The board and the company’s mindset has been to go ahead and invest even if you don’t have all of the demand because you have to create evidence for the market that you have the capability,” Ijaz said.

What gives them confidence that the bet will pay off, he said, is that the market appears to be on the other side of the valley of death. “I think we’re on that upswing where it’s truly market-driven,” he said.

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