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Our Next Energy Inc. has landed a deal with Shyft Group Inc. to supply the delivery vehicle manufacturer with lithium iron phosphate batteries at a Michigan plant.
Worth more than $200 million in revenue, the agreement calls for the Michigan-based startup battery manufacturer to supply Shyft with 15,000 battery packs for Class 3-5 trucks over the next five years, ONE announced Thursday. Shyft was formerly known as Spartan Motors.
It is the second largest deal announced by ONE in terms of revenue potential, behind its agreement to supply energy storage products to Berkshire Hathaway Energy’s solar-powered manufacturing hub in West Virginia.
ONE CEO Mujeeb Ijaz told Crain’s Detroit Business, an affiliate of Automotive News, that the Shyft deal is an important step forward for its automotive business.
“Shyft has a very long history of developing products that the market cares about, and we believe their segment leadership is quite deep,” Ijaz said. “Partnering with a Michigan company just makes our current ecosystem that much stronger.”
The batteries will supply Shyft’s Blue Arc, a new line of electric last-mile-delivery vehicles. The company declined to specify customers, but its largest clients include Amazon Inc. and FedEx Corp.
It also has an initial order of 2,000 electric vehicles from North Carolina-based Randy Marion Automotive Group. The loss of defunct Electric Last Mile Solutions is Shyft’s gain. Marion had placed an order of 1,000 units from Troy-based ELMS before the company crumbled, and Mullen Automotive Inc. absorbed its assets.
ONE will produce a new variation of its 79kWh Aries battery for Shyft’s Class 5 truck. ONE is dividing the battery into two 62 kWh segments and double stacking them for 248 kWh and 540 volts. The company said the flexible configuration allows for better energy efficiency and more discretion over how to use vehicle storage capacity, a key concern for delivery vehicles.
LFP batteries do not contain nickel or cobalt — elements that are problematic for their limited supply and origins. The chemistry offers less range than the current industry standard NMC (nickel, manganese, cobalt), but LFP is ideal for last-mile delivery vehicles that are frequently charged. Shyft’s other battery supplier, California-based Proterra, makes NMC batteries.
Shyft joins Berkshire Hathaway, Motiv and Bollinger Motors, also acquired by Mullen last year, as ONE customers that have been announced.
ONE’s commercial vehicle batteries are being produced in a Piston Group plant in Van Buren Township near ONE’s planned $1.6 billion plant, which will make batteries for passenger vehicles.
Production for the Shyft batteries is to begin at the end of the month. The company announced last month that it would invest $16 million at its plant in Charlotte, MIch., to build EVs.
“We feel very confident in the product’s ability to function in their system because we have been driving their vehicles in metro Detroit for months,” Ijaz said.