Home Industry Technology Renault, Airbus to develop battery tech for cars and airplanes The partnership will also help Airbus develop tech linked to hybrid-electric aircraft by Bloomberg December 1, 2022 Renault SA and Airbus SE are partnering to advance battery technology for next-generation cars and planes. Engineering teams from the companies will jointly research and develop solutions on energy storage, one of the roadblocks to longer-range electric vehicles, Renault and Airbus said Wednesday. The partnership will also help Airbus develop tech linked to hybrid-electric aircraft. The pact reflects companies’ efforts to better navigate the costly and difficult electrification shift by teaming up with peers. Renault chief executive officer Luca de Meo this month presented a complex split of the automaker’s electric-vehicle and combustion-engine businesses. We are partnering with @Airbus to advance research on electrification and help mature technologies associated with next-generation battery systems. ?⚡️To learn more: https://t.co/uQaHBH7QxL pic.twitter.com/3dhbnoJCwK — Renault Group (@renaultgroup) November 30, 2022 “For the first time, two European leaders from different industries are sharing engineering knowledges to shape the future of hybrid-electric aircrafts,” Gilles Le Borgne, Renault’s executive vice president for engineering, said in a statement. “Aviation is an extremely demanding field in terms of both safety and energy consumption, and so is the car industry.” The cooperation will focus on energy management optimization and battery weight improvement as Renault and Airbus seek to move from current cell chemistries to solid-state designs to double battery energy density by roughly 2030. The companies pledged to look into the entire life-cycle of future batteries including recycling to reduce their carbon footprint. Read: EasyJet, Rolls-Royce test jet engine running on hydrogen fuel Tags Airbus Airplanes Renault 0 Comments You might also like Airbus expands global footprint with Saudi Arabia HQ Dubai’s Emirates Airline says ‘wings clipped’ by Boeing delays Dubai’s Emirates takes delivery of first its A350-900 aircraft Saudi Arabia’s Riyadh Air places order for 60 Airbus A321neo