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China’s CATL launches EV chassis that can withstand high-speed crash

Avatr, Changan Auto and Huawei will be the first to use the chassis, which has a battery capable of running for about 1,000km

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CATL has a global market share of roughly 37 per cent in EV batteries. Photo: Reuters

China’s Contemporary Amperex Technology (CATL), the world’s largest electric vehicle battery maker, on Tuesday launched a new electric vehicle chassis that it says can withstand a 120km/h (75mph) frontal impact without catching fire or exploding, as it touts safety as a key selling point.

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The chassis has a battery capable of running for about 1,000km on a single charge and reduces the time required for mass production of a vehicle to 12-18 months from the traditional 36 months or longer, CATL said.

The company aims to sell the new EV platform – called “panshi” in Chinese, which translates to “bedrock” – to premium carmakers seeking to accelerate development and reduce costs.

“Due to the extremely high crash speed and intensity, there has been no previous instance of any new energy vehicle daring to challenge a 120km/h frontal pole impact test,” said Ni Jun, CATL’s chief manufacturing officer.

CATL has launched a new EV chassis called “panshi”. Photo: Reuters
CATL has launched a new EV chassis called “panshi”. Photo: Reuters

The speed for a frontal impact safety test in the commonly used China New Car Assessment Program is 56kph.

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Chinese EV brand Avatr, which is co-owned by CATL, state-owned Changan Auto and technology giant Huawei, will be the first to develop EV models based on CATL’s Bedrock chassis, Chen Zhao, president of Avatr said at the press conference.

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