BLUETTI AC200P Portable Power Station | 2,000W 2,000Wh
The compact AC200P Portable Power Station is a top pick for plug-and-play power. It’s ideal for both outdoor activities and emergency home backup should the power go out. It features a 2000W pure sine wave inverter and a LiFePO4 battery with more than 3,500 life cycles to 80%. It also boasts 17 outlets that ensure any device can be charged without hassle.
It’ll run a 5,000 BTU air conditioner for between one and four hours and a 70W car fridge for 20 hours.
And when it’s time to charge up the AC200P, this eco-friendly power source is versatile: It can be charged up by everything from an AC outlet to solar panels.
BLUETTI AC200MAX Expandable Power Station | 2,200W 2,048Wh
The versatile AC200Max Expandable Power Station packs a punch – it offers the option to boost power by connecting it to two B230 battery modules at 6,144Wh or two B300 battery modules at 8,192Wh using a D050S connection cable.
And the AC200MAX is impressive just on its own: It has a 2,048Wh capacity and can deliver 2,200W to multiple devices, and it also features two top-mounted wireless charging pads. It’s a quality power source that delivers the power you need consistently, both indoors and out.
Its LiFePO4 battery can power a 10W light bulb for more than 150 hours or a 5000 BTU air conditioner for between one and four hours.
And when it’s time to charge up the AC200MAX, 900W of solar power can do it in 3-3.5 hours, and a 500W AC adapter has it ready to go in 5.5-6 hours.
Like the AC200P, the AC200MAX can deliver 3,500 cycles yet will still retain 80% of its original capacity.
The BLUETTI EB3A is a very capable power station – it’s got nine outlets to charge multiple devices at once, so it can easily function as a backup generator if your power goes out, and this compact clean energy source of power is great to take on a camping trip.
A 100W laptop can be powered up 3.5 times, a 20W fan can be run for 11 hours – and with the hot summer we’re having, that’s essential on a camping trip! – and a 60W mini fridge can be kept humming along for 3.6 hours.
And when it’s time to charge the EB3A up again, there are plenty of choices, including via an AC outlet, solar panels, a car cigarette lighter, AC + solar, and AC + adapter. Using a PV200 solar panel charges the EB3A up in just two hours.
The EB3A has a LiFePO4 battery and Battery Management System that delivers 2,500 life cycles to 80%.
Whether it’s building a van-life power system or providing enough power for DIY, gardening and more, the AC300 + 1 B300 bundle consistently exceeds expectations.
On the home front, the AC300 + B300 can prevent spoiled food in fridges and piles of dirty laundry when the power goes out, as they’re capable of running anything from coffee makers to a 700W refrigerator and a 500W washing machine.
The modular AC300 combo bundle uses a LIFEPO4 battery with over 3,500 life cycles to 80%. It features a 3000W pure sine wave inverter with 16 outputs.
With over 10 years of industry experience, BLUETTI is committed to sustainability, offering quality green energy storage solutions for both indoor and outdoor use. BLUETTI products are available in more than 70 countries and are trusted by millions of customers across the globe. For more information, please visit BLUETTI online.
Solar panel giant Qcells announced today that it’s temporarily furloughing 1,000 US workers – 25% of its workforce – and reducing pay and shifts at its factories in northeast Georgia due to supply chain delays caused by US Customs.
Qcells furloughs 1,000 workers
The supply chain delays are hindering the company’s ability to import components to build its solar panels. This has resulted in Qcells’ two factories in Cartersville and Dalton being unable to operate at full capacity for several months.
Qcells spokeswoman Marta Stoepker shared the following statement in an exclusive with Channel 2 Action News in Atlanta:
The company says the furloughed workers, who were notified this afternoon, will retain full benefits and won’t be laid off. However, Qcells will no longer be using staffing agency employees in Georgia “at this time.”
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As Qcells introduced new supply chains to support its growing solar panel manufacturing facilities in Georgia, the company was recently forced to scale back production while our shipments into the US were delayed in the customs clearance process.
Although our supply chain operations are beginning to normalize, today we shared with our employees that HR actions must be taken to improve operational efficiency until production capacity returns to normal levels.
Stoepker said it expects to bring the furloughed workers back “in the coming weeks and months.” She continued:
Our commitment to building the entire solar supply chain in the United States remains. We will soon be back on track with the full force of our Georgia team delivering American-made energy to communities around the country.
Electrek’s Take
In January 2023, the Seoul-headquartered Qcells announced it would invest more than $2.5 billion to build a solar supply chain in Georgia – the largest-ever investment in clean energy manufacturing in the US to date. That included expanding the Dalton solar factory and building a fully integrated solar supply chain factory in Cartersville, Georgia, that will manufacture solar ingots, wafers, cells, and finished panels.
It’s not quite there yet, because that takes time. In the meantime, it’s being penalized by Customs. The US government under Trump says it’s keen on boosting domestic manufacturing. Why would it work against a company that’s onshoring an entire solar supply chain, including recycling?
Dalton and Cartersville employ nearly 4,000 people. Its total output will reach 8.4 GW of solar production capacity per year, which is equivalent to nearly 46,000 panels per day – enough to power approximately 1.3 million homes annually.
It’s ludicrous that it has been forced to furlough a quarter of its workforce due to the ineptness of the Trump administration’s US Customs policies. This is right up there with the ICE arrests at Hyundai’s plant in Georgia. Bravo.
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The breakthrough EV batteries Toyota says will double driving range and cut charging times are facing another setback. The company is once again delaying plans for a new battery plant in Japan.
Why is Toyota delaying its EV battery plant this time?
Earlier this year, Toyota bought a 280,000-square-meter plot of land in Fukuoka, Japan, where it planned to build a plant to produce the more advanced EV batteries.
A location agreement was expected to be signed by April, but Toyota pushed back construction by several months, blaming slower-than-expected demand for electric vehicles.
The agreement was expected to be finalized this Fall, but that will no longer be the case. According to Nikkei, Toyota is delaying the EV battery plant for the second time. Toyota will review and adjust plans over the next year.
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Fukuoka governor, Seitaro Hattori, confirmed the news with reporters on Friday following a meeting with Toyota’s president, Koji Sato. Hattori also shut down claims that Toyota was planning to scrap the battery plant altogether.
Toyota EV battery roadmap (Source: Toyota)
Toyota again blamed slowing EV demand for the delay. The decision comes despite Keiji Kaita, president of Toyota’s Carbon Neutral Advanced Engineering Development Center, confirming at the Japan Mobility Show just last week that it’s “sticking on the schedule” to introduce its first solid-state battery-powered EV by 2028.
Last month, Toyota said it aimed to “achieve the world’s first practical use of all-solid-state batteries in BEVs” after securing a partnership with Sumitomo Metal Mining Co. to mass-produce them. It’s also working with Japanese oil giant Idemitsu.
Idemitsu’s value chain for solid electrolytes used in all-solid-state EV batteries (Source: Idemitsu)
The company recently revealed a solid-state battery pack prototype that it claims can deliver 747 miles (1,200 km) range and 10-minute fast charging, but will we ever see it actually in production?
Electrek’s Take
Toyota has been making empty promises about EV batteries for almost a decade now. It initially planned to introduce solid-state EV batteries in 2020, then pushed it to 2023, then 2026, and now it’s saying it will be around 2028.
Mass production is likely closer to the end of the decade, if Toyota doesn’t delay it again. While it’s blaming the slowing demand, global EV sales are still on the rise. According to Rho Motion, global EV sales topped 2 million for the first time in a single month in September 2025. Through the first nine months of the year, EV sales are up 26% compared to the same period in 2024.
Even with the US ending the $7,500 federal tax credit and other policies designed to promote electric vehicles, global adoption will continue building momentum over the next few years.
Is it a demand issue, or is Toyota just looking for another excuse? With rivals like Volkswagen, Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai, BMW, and Honda advancing next-gen EV batteries, Toyota will only fall further behind if it continues delaying key projects.
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In the Electrek Podcast, we discuss the most popular news in the world of sustainable transport and energy. In this week’s episode, we discuss how Tesla is now Elon’s after the shareholders’ meeting, Xpeng going all-in on AI, Rivian’s earnings, and more.
As a reminder, we’ll have an accompanying post, like this one, on the site with an embedded link to the live stream. Head to the YouTube channel to get your questions and comments in.
After the show ends at around 5 p.m. ET, the video will be archived on YouTube and the audio on all your favorite podcast apps:
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Here’s the live stream for today’s episode starting at 4:00 p.m. ET (or the video after 5 p.m. ET:
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