Chinese battery giant CATL is looking forward to making batteries in the US if President-elect Donald Trump gives the green light for Chinese investment in the electric-vehicle supply chain, founder and chairman Robin Zeng told Reuters in a recent interview. “Originally, when we wanted to invest in the US, the US government said no,” said the Chinese billionaire. The comments were delivered after Trump, who wants to prevent China-made vehicle imports, in August expressed his openness to Chinese companies building factories in the US, adding that incentives will be awarded to create local jobs. The world’s top battery maker had been in talks to open plants as early as 2026 to make batteries for clients such as BMW and Ford in the US, according to a Reuters report published May 6, 2022. However, the company, for now, shares its battery-production know-how with Ford and Tesla in their US factories under licensing deals. [Reuters]
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
CATL seeks to manufacture batteries in the US pending Trump’s approval · TechNode-鼓盆之戚网
sitemap
文章
58559
浏览
69391
获赞
2625
Google now has a much better way to alert you to critical security issues
If someone's hacking into your account, getting an email about it might not do much good; by the timApple Photos can correctly identify your 'brassiere' photos in search
Apple has used image recognition algorithms to search and organize its Photos app since iOS 10 debutPeople are getting locked out of their Google Docs, and it's bad
It turns out that even your private documents can be censored online. This morning, a ton of users rApple publishes list of cars that can wirelessly charge your iPhone 8
If you have an iPhone 8 or an iPhone 8 Plus, and fancy charging your phone in your car, we have somePortland bans facial recognition tech, despite Amazon's lobbying
The city of Portland just took the fight against facial recognition up a notch. Late Wednesday afterThere's a major problem with both Apple and Google's burger emoji
Are you team Apple or team Google? We're not asking about your choice of smartphone, laptop or tableWalmart looks to undercut Amazon with new robotic employees
Walmart is expanding its network of friendly store robots. Robotic employees have been roaming the aApple's fight with big banks is getting even nastier, and it was already nasty
Apple is not happy, not happy at all.In its latest submission to Australia's competition watchdog, tTim Cook on Hong Kong protest app removal: We did it to protect our users
Apple has received a fair amount of backlash over its decision to ban an app that allows Hong Kong pNordstrom, Neiman Marcus ditch Ivanka Trump lines
Two weeks into the Trump presidency, Ivanka Trump is out at two major department stores. Nordstrom wHow to find and cancel your app subscriptions in iOS
Apps are essential to getting the most out of our smartphones, but the subscriptions that some of thApple says the most popular emoji is 'Face With Tears of Joy'
Well this makes perfect sense. According to Apple, the most popular emoji for U.S. English speakersWhen SSD Performance Goes Awry
An unfortunate tale about Samsung's SSD 840 read performance degradationAn avalanche of reports emer'Rocket League' is finally coming to the Nintendo Switch in November
Mark your calendars, folks. Rocket Leaguewill be finally released on the Nintendo Switch on NovemberIf you really don't want to get pregnant, don't use this fancy app. Get an IUD.
It sounds like a dream: opening an app instead of taking a birth control pill. Swiping and clicking