Transportation

Ample’s co-founder explains what it takes to scale EV battery swapping

Comment

illustration of John de Souza, co-founder of Ample
Image Credits: Bryce Durbin

The conversation around widespread electric vehicle adoption has been inherently linked with charging: Are the chargers plentiful? Will they charge my car fast enough? Are they plugged into a grid that’s not entirely run by coal?

Billions of dollars have gone into developing batteries that can handle fast charges as well as chargers that can top up a vehicle in as little as 20 minutes. Few, at least in the U.S., are really talking about battery swapping for cars and trucks.

Ample happens to be among the few leading that charge.

Ample, which rose from the ashes of its unsuccessful predecessor, Better Place, has brought battery swapping to San Francisco and soon will introduce the tech to Japan and Madrid through a series of partnerships with fleet partners like Repsol and Eneos. Unlike its predecessor, Ample doesn’t try to deploy battery-swapping stations until it knows it’ll have the customers to use them.

Since we last checked in with Ample’s co-founder and president John de Souza a year ago, the San Francisco-based startup has quietly grown, building new swapping stations and signing on additional fleet partners around the globe.

Meanwhile, battery-swapping tech for cars has gained footing in China. Beijing is throwing its weight behind a few companies advancing the technology as part of its broader plan to ensure 25% of all cars sold are electric by 2025. Automakers Nio and Geely, battery-swapping tech developer Aulton and oil producer Sinopec said this year they plan to build 24,000 swapping stations across China by 2025. Today there are 1,400.

We caught up with de Souza to talk about the implications of China’s investment in battery swapping, why scaling fast-charging infrastructure is a lot harder than we think and sought his advice on how hardware startups can scale while staying lean.

(Editor’s note: The following interview, part of an ongoing series with founders who are building transportation companies, has been edited for length and clarity.)


You’re calling me from Madrid, which you had said Ample was targeting as its next launch city.

Yes, we are deploying in Madrid as we speak. We’re partnering with Repsol to quickly deploy a wide network; Uber to work with ride-sharing fleet managers; and automakers (which we haven’t announced publicly yet) to deliver vehicles with the Ample solution.

From a customer standpoint, our partnerships focus on ride-sharing, car-sharing and last-mile delivery.

Battery swapping can be difficult to pull off because it requires some standardization of the battery. Ample provides modular battery swapping, which means you don’t swap the entire battery pack. Can you explain why that’s significant?

There are two aspects to Ample’s modular battery swapping that are significant. Firstly, it allows the flexibility to fit our packs into vehicles of different sizes and shapes by rearranging the modular batteries. That means we can allow for different capacities by varying the number of modules. It also makes our stations, which are run robotically, more cost-effective, because you’re moving lighter modules instead of traditional packs.

Secondly, Ample’s patent to allow modules to adjust to electrical characteristics of vehicles means we can work with OEMs without requiring any changes to the vehicle. We can also use the same modules in different vehicles, which makes it easy to introduce new chemistries into cars.

You say Ample’s batteries are vehicle agnostic, but you still need to work with automakers in some way to ensure they don’t put their own batteries in the vehicle, right?

We work with automakers on being able to purchase cars without batteries. As we work with them more closely, it’s to give them a replacement battery. They might get their batteries from Samsung, LG or CATL, but we can give them a battery that’s a drop-in replacement. So just as a customer might choose the type of tires or seats they want in the car, they can one day choose which batteries they want to use. If they put our batteries in, it’s swappable. If they put their own, they’re not.

Ample was tracking to get to 1,000 vehicles with swappable batteries in the Bay Area by the end of the year. Have you achieved that goal?

We’re not releasing the numbers, but we do have 12 stations currently deployed. We’ll be getting to 30 stations in the Bay Area before the end of next year.

What types of fleets work best for scaling EV battery swapping?

We initially thought that people who need high mileage would be a natural fit for battery swapping. But we realized that the low-mileage case is an interesting problem.

If you’re in a city like San Francisco and you deploy vehicles, the vehicles don’t drive around that much. They might do 30 miles a day. But the cost to tee up a lot and put chargers in is tremendous. You could be paying about $20,000 per charger. If you buy 400 cars, you spend $8 billion installing chargers.

The other problem to solve with the low-mileage use case is that you’re buying a bigger battery than you need. These cars come with a 300-kilometer battery range, and they don’t need that much. So for those fleets, right-sizing the battery could save a lot of money and swapping batteries allows for longevity on the vehicle itself.

China seems to be embracing this technology more than the U.S. What do you think China has that the U.S. doesn’t have?

Two things: scale and customer base. China has achieved such a high level of EV deployment that their initial assumption, that charging alone could address the EV infrastructure’s needs, started getting challenged. They needed to incorporate other solutions to continue scaling.

Also, the use cases that China has enabled for EVs are considerably wider. While the majority of users in the U.S. tend to be affluent owners with parking garages and low daily usage, EV users in China include taxi fleets, last-mile delivery and lower-income users that don’t have the same access to charging that U.S. users have.

For automakers, it’s becoming a competitive advantage to build better batteries that last longer and can charge quicker, and there are plenty of developments in fast charging. Are you concerned that these advancements will happen before battery swapping can take hold?

China has the most fast chargers per electric car in the world. They have 82% of all the fast chargers and 56% of electric vehicles out there. They had the density, and they’ve still made it a strategic priority to deploy battery swapping.

When we started thinking about this eight years ago, people told us that in two years, we’ll have all these 350 KW and 500 KW chargers. We don’t have a lot of those today, and the problems just haven’t gone away. Deploying fast chargers is very expensive; the batteries degrade quickly. Fast chargers also lose efficiency the faster they go. As you get closer to cities, the grids can’t even support them. If you’re working with fleets and installing fast chargers, the grid upgrades probably cost four times what you need for swapping.

Today, Ample can swap a battery in 10 minutes, and we’ll halve that by early next year. If you want to get a fast charger to charge a vehicle in five to 10 minutes, you need a 1 MW or 2 MW charger, which we know is nowhere near the horizon.

What have you learned from your pilot with Uber?

The government says it wants ride-sharing to go electric. Fine, but if the driver spends 10 to 12 hours a week charging, which is time they aren’t spending on the road, they make less money. The driver is effectively subsidizing the EV transition, and there is a top-line penalty for drivers who make that switch. I think there’s another way that economically makes sense for drivers to make that switch.

Also, in the U.S., about 40% of EV chargers are broken. The subsidies from the government are just for installing the chargers, but there’s no path to maintaining them.

When we last spoke, you said that if there’s a fool in the room and you don’t know who it is, it might be you. In the last year, no one in the U.S. has come forward with a rival battery-swapping company. Does that make you nervous?

Are there other solutions that could meet the needs of battery charging? You always have to watch out for that, but is it realistic to think we can have chargers that charge in five minutes coming soon? There are massive challenges to that, and we haven’t seen many solutions.

If you go outside the U.S., we’ve seen a lot of battery swapping. In Asia, it’s predominantly two-wheelers, but we’re also seeing Japanese companies making custom trucks with swappable batteries. The part that’s hard to solve is using the same battery across vehicles, and it’s easier to standardize the batteries for two-wheelers. China has started to solve it with four-wheelers in a very Chinese way with lots of government support.

We’re seeing swapping proliferating, and we have one solution that’s unique and is the key to bringing it to everybody else.

You’ve raised almost $276 million to date, and your last round closed in November 2021. Are you trying to raise more now?

We want to raise more debt and asset-backed financing. We think debt will help us do large deployments because we work primarily with fleets. We don’t actually have to deploy infrastructure until we have a fleet customer signed on. That allows us to finance against the batteries and the stations.

Since we work with corporations with known credit ratings that sign on for multiyear contracts, from a loan perspective, they’re not just lending money to a startup. They’re lending it to an Amazon or a Walmart — a large corporation they feel comfortable lending to.

The funding environment is tight right now, and battery swapping is expensive. Do you have any advice for founders on how to scale while staying lean?

It’s tricky with hardware; every year, you need to start selling from zero. It was really important for us to come up with a recurring revenue model. You want to end the year with visibility on revenue.

Also, if you’re buying hardware, you need to time it between signing a contract and building. Otherwise, you might just end up spending a lot of money building something without money in the pipeline. If you combine those two with asset-backed financing, you don’t even need to put up the capital yourself.

That combination is what has helped us to go after it and use a lot of CapEx without taking the risk.

Where do you think Ample will be by the end of 2023?

We’ll be announcing big station efficiencies. We spent a lot of time getting feedback on how to make a better experience, and we’ll announce a new station that addresses that.

We also hope to be fully live in multiple cities with different types of fleet partners. Finally, we’re going to expand the range of vehicles we service. We’ve already announced passenger cars, and next year, we’ll expand that range a lot, even into delivery trucks. We want to prove that the stations can serve different types of vehicles and the need for battery swapping extends far beyond passenger cars.

More TechCrunch

A Jio Financial unit plans to purchase customer premises equipment and telecom gear worth $4.32 billion from Reliance Retail.

Jio Financial unit to buy $4.32B of telecom gear from Reliance Retail

Foursquare, the location-focused outfit that in 2020 merged with Factual, another location-focused outfit, is joining the parade of companies to make cuts to one of its biggest cost centers –…

Foursquare just laid off 105 employees

“Running with scissors is a cardio exercise that can increase your heart rate and require concentration and focus,” says Google’s new AI search feature. “Some say it can also improve…

Using memes, social media users have become red teams for half-baked AI features

The European Space Agency selected two companies on Wednesday to advance designs of a cargo spacecraft that could establish the continent’s first sovereign access to space.  The two awardees, major…

ESA prepares for the post-ISS era, selects The Exploration Company, Thales Alenia to develop cargo spacecraft

Expressable is a platform that offers one-on-one virtual sessions with speech language pathologists.

Expressable brings speech therapy into the home

The French Secretary of State for the Digital Economy as of this year, Marina Ferrari, revealed this year’s laureates during VivaTech week in Paris. According to its promoters, this fifth…

The biggest French startups in 2024 according to the French government

Spotify is notifying customers who purchased its Car Thing product that the devices will stop working after December 9, 2024. The company discontinued the device back in July 2022, but…

Spotify to shut off Car Thing for good, leading users to demand refunds

Elon Musk’s X is preparing to make “likes” private on the social network, in a change that could potentially confuse users over the difference between something they’ve favorited and something…

X should bring back stars, not hide ‘likes’

The FCC has proposed a $6 million fine for the scammer who used voice-cloning tech to impersonate President Biden in a series of illegal robocalls during a New Hampshire primary…

$6M fine for robocaller who used AI to clone Biden’s voice

Welcome back to TechCrunch Mobility — your central hub for news and insights on the future of transportation. Sign up here for free — just click TechCrunch Mobility! Is it…

Tesla lobbies for Elon and Kia taps into the GenAI hype

Crowdaa is an app that allows non-developers to easily create and release apps on the mobile store. 

App developer Crowdaa raises €1.2M and plans a US expansion

Back in 2019, Canva, the wildly successful design tool, introduced what the company was calling an enterprise product, but in reality it was more geared toward teams than fulfilling true…

Canva launches a proper enterprise product — and they mean it this time

TechCrunch Disrupt 2024 isn’t just an event for innovation; it’s a platform where your voice matters. With the Disrupt 2024 Audience Choice Program, you have the power to shape the…

2 days left to vote for Disrupt Audience Choice

The United States Department of Justice and 30 state attorneys general filed a lawsuit against Live Nation Entertainment, the parent company of Ticketmaster, for alleged monopolistic practices. Live Nation and…

Ticketmaster antitrust lawsuit could give new hope to ticketing startups

The U.K. will shortly get its own rulebook for Big Tech, after peers in the House of Lords agreed Thursday afternoon to pass the Digital Markets, Competition and Consumer bill…

‘Pro-competition’ rules for Big Tech make it through UK’s pre-election wash-up

Spotify’s addition of its AI DJ feature, which introduces personalized song selections to users, was the company’s first step into an AI future. Now, Spotify is developing an alternative version…

Spotify experiments with an AI DJ that speaks Spanish

Call Arc can help answer immediate and small questions, according to the company. 

Arc Search’s new Call Arc feature lets you ask questions by ‘making a phone call’

After multiple delays, Apple and the Paris area transportation authority rolled out support for Paris transit passes in Apple Wallet. It means that people can now use their iPhone or…

Paris transit passes now available in iPhone’s Wallet app

Redwood Materials, the battery recycling startup founded by former Tesla co-founder JB Straubel, will be recycling production scrap for batteries going into General Motors electric vehicles.  The company announced Thursday…

Redwood Materials is partnering with Ultium Cells to recycle GM’s EV battery scrap

A new startup called Auggie is aiming to give parents a single platform where they can shop for products and connect with each other. The company’s new app, which launched…

Auggie’s new app helps parents find community and shop

Andrej Safundzic, Alan Flores Lopez and Leo Mehr met in a class at Stanford focusing on ethics, public policy and technological change. Safundzic — speaking to TechCrunch — says that…

Lumos helps companies manage their employees’ identities — and access

Remark trains AI models on human product experts to create personas that can answer questions with the same style of their human counterparts.

Remark puts thousands of human product experts into AI form

ZeroPoint claims to have solved compression problems with hyper-fast, low-level memory compression that requires no real changes to the rest of the computing system.

ZeroPoint’s nanosecond-scale memory compression could tame power-hungry AI infrastructure

In 2021, Roi Ravhon, Asaf Liveanu and Yizhar Gilboa came together to found Finout, an enterprise-focused toolset to help manage and optimize cloud costs. (We covered the company’s launch out…

Finout lands cash to grow its cloud spend management platform

On the heels of raising $102 million earlier this year, Bugcrowd is making good on its promise to use some of that funding to make acquisitions to strengthen its security…

Bugcrowd, the crowdsourced white-hat hacker platform, acquires Informer to ramp up its security chops

Google is preparing to build what will be the first subsea fiber-optic cable connecting the continents of Africa and Australia. The news comes as the major cloud hyperscalers battle it…

Google to build first subsea fiber-optic cable connecting Africa with Australia

The Kia EV3 — the new all-electric compact SUV revealed Thursday — illustrates a growing appetite among global automakers to bring generative AI into their vehicles.  The automaker said the…

The new Kia EV3 will have an AI assistant with ChatGPT DNA

Bing, Microsoft’s search engine, was working improperly for several hours on Thursday in Europe. At first, we noticed it wasn’t possible to perform a web search at all. Now it…

Bing’s API was down, taking Microsoft Copilot, DuckDuckGo and ChatGPT’s web search feature down too

If you thought autonomous driving was just for cars, think again. The “autonomous navigation” market — where ships steer themselves guided by AI, resulting in fuel and time savings —…

Autonomous shipping startup Orca AI tops up with $23M led by OCV Partners and MizMaa Ventures

The best known mycoprotein is probably Quorn, a meat substitute that’s fast approaching its 40th birthday. But Finnish biotech startup Enifer is cooking up something even older: Its proprietary single-cell…

Meet the Finnish biotech startup bringing a long-lost mycoprotein to your plate