This electric forklift concept by Japanese equipment giant Komatsu is powered by sodium-ion batteries and promises safer, cheaper operation than the competition.
Sodium-ion batteries have been hailed as a possible alternative to more expensive lithium-ion batteries for a while, and have shown enough promise that EV leaders like BYD and Volkswagen-backed JAC have already spent big money developing the technology. Not to be outdone by the on-road guys, Komatsu recently unveiled this concept electric forklift powered by sodium-ion batteries as part of a pilot program to validate the use of sodium batteries with an eye toward series production in the near future.
It’s important to understand that Komatsu isn’t comparing its new sodium concept against lithium ion tech, the way a car manufacturer focused on maximum energy density might. Instead, it’s comparing the idea of a single battery technology instead of its current two. Those being li-ion for extended, heavy-load operations, and old-school lead-acid batteries for the majority of their customers.
If Komatsu’s new sodium-ion battery-equipped electric forklift can do almost as much work as the li-ion machines, at a small enough premium to the lead-acid units, then it might make sense to go all-sodium, all-the time, and leverage the economies of scale therein to offer one machine to customers that can do it all.
The concept is equipped with a sodium-ion battery pack developed by Shanghai Hirano Environment Technology Co., Ltd., using sodium-ion battery cells manufactured by Jiangsu Highstar Battery Manufacturing Co., Ltd. and is designed to fit Komatsu’s existing 1.5-ton class electric forklifts. The concept machine has already begin jobsite testing.