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This photo provided by Hyundai Motor Group shows an energy storage system (ESS) set up at the plant of Hyundai Motor in Ulsan, 414 kilometers southeast of Seoul. (Hyundai Motor Group) |
Hyundai Motor Group, the world's fifth-largest automotive group, said Sunday that it will carry out a pilot project to reuse batteries used for electric vehicles (EVs) at solar power plants.
The move follows the Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy's recent decision to give regulatory exemptions for new business models based on reusing EV batteries. Before, it was difficult for companies to push for such projects as the country has no regulations related to the reuse of worn-out EV batteries.
The data from the project will help the government set up regulations on the matter, Hyundai Motor Group said.
The group will build a 2-megawatt-hour energy storage system (ESS) with waste EV batteries at the solar power plant at Hyundai Motor Co.'s Ulsan plant, 414 kilometers southeast of Seoul, to provide electricity generating at the plant outside the electrical power grid.
Hyundai Motor Group will also push ahead with a plan to provide a 3-gigawatt-hour ESS to be built with waste EV batteries in the wake of the pilot project.
The 3-gigawatt-hour ESS would be the world's largest ever, the group said.
In a bid to reuse the waste EV batteries, Hyundai Motor Group signed a cooperative deal with Finland's energy company Wartsila in 2018. (Yonhap)