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    Home»More»Environment & Climate»Why General Motors Is Betting on Sodium-Ion Batteries
    Environment & Climate

    Why General Motors Is Betting on Sodium-Ion Batteries

    AdminBy AdminJune 18, 2026No Comments8 Mins Read0 Views
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    Peak Energy announced last week that it has entered a new partnership with General Motors to manufacture sodium-ion batteries for energy storage systems.

    The deal marks a pivotal moment for Peak, a startup founded three years ago, and an opportunity for GM to branch out into a battery technology that is largely limited to China.

    I spoke this week with Cameron Dales, Peak’s co-founder and chief commercial officer, and I started by asking him how he would explain a sodium-ion battery to a 10-year-old.

    A good place to start, he said, is to understand that the market-leading technology—lithium-ion batteries—gained a foothold in the 1990s because of high energy density. So it has a long track record of success.

    “They pack a lot of power into a small package, which is why they’re so great for mobile applications, because you’re carrying this battery around with you in your phone, you’re carrying it around with you in your car, which is a large mobile device,” he said.

    But there are downsides. Lithium-ion batteries use rare and expensive materials such as lithium and cobalt, and they are highly flammable.

    Sodium-ion is a sister technology, he said. The main difference is that it uses sodium to carry the charge inside the battery, rather than lithium.

    “It’s the same raw material that goes into table salt,” Dales said. “It’s an abundant element.”

    Also, fire risk is much lower.

    The main downside is that a sodium-ion battery has lower energy density than a lithium-ion one, so an energy storage project requires a larger battery or batteries to achieve the same capacity.

    But what about the cost?

    Right now, sodium-ion batteries cost more than lithium-ion because the latter has economies of scale from being the dominant technology and companies have spent decades honing the manufacturing process. But companies such as Peak are confident that sodium-ion batteries will be less expensive, and eventually much less expensive, as the product moves from the fringes of the market to the mainstream.

    The world’s leading battery-maker, CATL of China, has invested in developing sodium-ion batteries for cars and energy storage, citing cost and safety advantages.

    In the United States, Peak is one of about a dozen companies working on the technology. One of its peers, Natron Energy, abruptly closed last year when its funding dried up. It had about 100 employees and operations in California and Michigan.

    Peak, which is based in Burlingame, California, in the Bay Area, has about 125 employees. It also has a cell engineering center in Broomfield, Colorado, near Denver. The company demonstrated its technology by completing a 3.1-megawatt-hour sodium-ion battery in the Denver area last year.

    Cameron Dales is Peak Energy’s co-founder and chief commercial officer.
    Cameron Dales is Peak Energy’s co-founder and chief commercial officer.

    Peak was founded in 2023 by Landon Mossberg, the CEO, who came from the battery maker Northvolt and had prior experience at Tesla, and Dales, who previously was at the battery maker Enovix. 

    Under the partnership with GM, the automaker will produce sodium-ion batteries in its Michigan battery lab, and Peak will be able to use them in its energy storage systems.

    The agreement helps GM build an energy business that includes electric vehicles, charging and stationary energy storage. Kurt Kelty, GM’s vice president for battery and sustainability, said in a news release that his company believes “sodium-ion will be a defining chemistry for grid-scale energy storage systems.”

    GM is one of several automakers branching out into energy storage systems. One reason for this is that the companies built battery manufacturing capacity that exceeds current EV demand, so they are looking to new markets.

    Based on manufacturing capacity, sodium-ion battery market share is essentially zero in North America, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. It will still be less than 1 percent in 2030, according to the research firm’s forecast.

    In China, sodium-ion’s market share is 1 percent and on track to rise to 3.4 percent by 2030.

    “Sodium-ion battery technology has advanced rapidly over the past two years, moving from lab-scale validation to early commercial deployment,” said Anya Sidhu, a battery analyst for Benchmark, in an email.

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    Sidhu said sodium-ion batteries are emerging as a complementary technology to lithium-ion rather than a replacement.

    “The partnership between GM and Peak Energy signals growing commercial confidence, particularly for stationary energy storage, where cost and supply chain resilience matter more than energy density,” she said.

    Dales said the market is large and diverse enough that several, if not many, battery technologies will be major contributors. For example, analysts and battery scientists have long made the case that solid-state batteries—with a solid instead of a liquid or gel as a key component—are the future because of high energy densities.

    “The ability to store energy is so foundational to so many things we do in the world,” he said. “There’s no reason why a single solution should be the thing that works best for every single application.”


    Other stories about the energy transition to take note of this week:  

    The Trump Administration Abandons Legal Fight Against Wind Energy: The Trump administration’s use of the federal bureaucracy to stop wind energy projects lost in court and last week the administration opted not to challenge the ruling, as my colleague Aman Azhar reports for ICN. The story also touches on other legal cases and a recent report from the Environmental Defense Fund showing that 2026 is shaping up to be a record year for U.S. renewable energy deployment.

    Another Company Agrees to Payment to Drop Offshore Wind Plans: Invenergy, the Chicago-based power plant developer, has agreed to abandon plans for four U.S. offshore wind leases in exchange for a reimbursement of fees worth $765 million from the Trump administration, as Jennifer McDermott reports for The Associated Press. The projects include one off of New Jersey that Invenergy has already said it wouldn’t build, plus others off of Maine and California. With this, the Trump administration has gotten companies to abandon plans for eight offshore wind leases, in line with officials’ desire to steer investment away from offshore wind and toward fossil fuels.

    When Does It Make Sense to Ditch Your Gasoline Car for an EV? High gasoline prices are helping to highlight the financial benefits of switching to an electric vehicle, but last year’s cancellation of federal tax credits for EVs was a step in the opposite direction. There are many considerations, financial and otherwise, in deciding whether and when to get an EV, as Jeff Brady reports for NPR.

    Solar Beat Coal in the United States for the First Time in May: Solar power plants generated more electricity in May than coal-fired power plants, the first month that’s ever happened, according to data from the think tank Ember. This shows the results of many new solar plants going online despite the Trump administration’s disdain for renewable energy, as Dan McCarthy reports for Canary Media. Natural gas power plants remain the country’s top electricity source.

    Inside Clean Energy is ICN’s weekly bulletin of news and analysis about the energy transition. Send news tips and questions to [email protected].

    About This Story

    Perhaps you noticed: This story, like all the news we publish, is free to read. That’s because Inside Climate News is a 501c3 nonprofit organization. We do not charge a subscription fee, lock our news behind a paywall, or clutter our website with ads. We make our news on climate and the environment freely available to you and anyone who wants it.

    That’s not all. We also share our news for free with scores of other media organizations around the country. Many of them can’t afford to do environmental journalism of their own. We’ve built bureaus from coast to coast to report local stories, collaborate with local newsrooms and co-publish articles so that this vital work is shared as widely as possible.

    Two of us launched ICN in 2007. Six years later we earned a Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting, and now we run the oldest and largest dedicated climate newsroom in the nation. We tell the story in all its complexity. We hold polluters accountable. We expose environmental injustice. We debunk misinformation. We scrutinize solutions and inspire action.

    Donations from readers like you fund every aspect of what we do. If you don’t already, will you support our ongoing work, our reporting on the biggest crisis facing our planet, and help us reach even more readers in more places?

    Please take a moment to make a tax-deductible donation. Every one of them makes a difference.

    Thank you,

    ICN reporter Dan Gearinoa


    Dan Gearino

    Reporter, Clean Energy

    Dan Gearino covers the business and policy of renewable energy and utilities, often with an emphasis on the midwestern United States. He is the main author of ICN’s Inside Clean Energy newsletter. He came to ICN in 2018 after a nine-year tenure at The Columbus Dispatch, where he covered the business of energy. Before that, he covered politics and business in Iowa and in New Hampshire. He grew up in Warren County, Iowa, just south of Des Moines, and lives in Columbus, Ohio.



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