Our Next Energy touts advancements in lithium iron phosphate battery technology

Novi — Our Next Energy Inc. on Tuesday announced what it described as a “significant milestone” in its quest to advance lithium iron phosphate battery technology for electric vehicles.

The Novi-based energy storage technology startup said that its Aries II battery pack, which uses an LFP chemistry and is slated to launch in 2025, is now within 6% of the leading benchmark nickel cobalt manganese battery in terms of range and mass. NCM is the most commonly-used battery chemistry in electric vehicles today because it has higher energy density, meaning it can deliver longer ranges on a single charge.

But ONE has built its business around LFP, a chemistry that is considered safer and more durable. Now, the company — led by automotive industry veteran Mujeeb Ijaz, who left Apple Inc. in 2020 to found ONE — says its in-development Aries II pack is close to achieving energy density parity with NCM batteries.

“LFP batteries have many advantages over NCM batteries, including cost and durability, while using safer and more abundant materials,” Ijaz said in a statement. “The key shortfall has been range and energy density. By engineering a battery pack with similar density to NCM, ONE has made LFP a sustainable alternative.”

Our Next Energy CEO Mujeeb Ijaz speaks with a Detroit News reporter at the company's Novi headquarters in March. He said Tuesday that the company has developed a lithium ion phosphate battery that almost reaches density parity with nickel cobalt manganese batteries.

ONE announced the advancement Tuesday during an Automotive Press Association event at the startup’s Novi headquarters.

ONE’s mission is to double the range of electric vehicles, do it without nickel-cobalt chemistries to decrease the risk of battery fires, and to develop a sustainable supply chain.

“We would like to see the end of it being a tradeoff,” Ijaz said. “We want it to be that you can deliver range, you can deliver it safely, and you can do it with abundant materials.”

The conclusion on Aries II being close to energy density parity with leading NCM battery packs was based on benchmarking that ONE conducted of 28 battery packs from across the industry, Ijaz said.

Additionally, the company said that its efforts have demonstrated a 20% to 30% energy density increase over “typical” LFP battery systems.