CATL is preparing to bring sodium-ion batteries into passenger electric vehicles, marking a potential shift in how EVs are powered as the industry looks beyond lithium-based chemistries.
At its recent Tech Day event, the company outlined a roadmap for deploying its new sodium-ion technology at scale, with the first passenger EVs expected to arrive by the end of 2026. The move builds on earlier deployments in light commercial vehicles and reflects CATL’s broader effort to maintain its lead in the global EV battery market.
The announcement came alongside other battery advancements, including CATL’s third-generation Shenxing ultra-fast charging battery. The company says the new system can charge from 10% to 98% in just over six minutes, surpassing competing technologies such as BYD’s Blade Battery platform in charging speed.

But sodium-ion batteries represent a different kind of innovation.
According to CATL’s chief scientist Wu Kai, lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries are approaching their theoretical limits in energy density. That constraint is pushing the industry to explore alternatives that can offer advantages in cost, safety, or performance under extreme conditions.
Sodium-ion technology is one such candidate.
CATL says it has resolved several technical challenges that previously limited large-scale production, including issues related to moisture control, gas generation, and material stability. These breakthroughs have enabled what the company describes as gigawatt-hour-scale industrialization, with full mass production targeted by the end of 2026.
The chemistry offers specific advantages in colder climates. CATL’s current sodium-ion battery packs can operate at temperatures as low as -30°C, and even at -40°C retain around 90% of usable capacity—performance levels that exceed many lithium-based batteries.
The first passenger EV to adopt the technology will be the Changan Nevo A06, developed in partnership with Changan Automobile. The model is positioned as the world’s first mass-produced EV equipped with a sodium-ion battery.

In terms of performance, CATL’s sodium-ion cells currently reach an energy density of about 175 Wh/kg. While lower than some lithium-based alternatives, the company aims to close that gap within three years, targeting driving ranges of up to 600 km (CLTC standard).
Beyond performance, sodium-ion batteries are also seen as a more sustainable option due to the abundance and lower cost of sodium compared to lithium. That could help reduce supply chain risks and stabilize battery pricing as EV demand continues to grow.
Takeaway: CATL’s push into sodium-ion batteries signals a broader shift in EV technology, with the chemistry offering a potentially lower-cost, cold-resistant alternative as the industry looks beyond the limits of lithium-based solutions.


