M
By John Millar
Posted about 1 month ago
MAN celebrates topping-out ceremony for new battery production facility in Nuremberg
The company is today celebrating the topping-out ceremony for the new building for the large-scale production of batteries for fully electric trucks and buses at its Nuremberg site.
- Total investment of around 100 million euros
- Almost 350 jobs in future technology
- Start of large-scale battery production for all-electric MAN trucks and buses from April 2025
- MAN is the first commercial vehicle manufacturer in Germany with its own battery series production
- MAN CEO Alexander Vlaskamp: ‘Establishing our own battery production is a milestone for MAN and an important sign for Bavaria and Germany as an industrial location.’
Guests at today's topping-out ceremony included the Bavarian Minister President Markus Söder, Nuremberg's Lord Mayor Marcus König, MAN Truck & Bus CEO Alexander Vlaskamp and the Chairman of the Works Council at MAN's Nuremberg site Markus Wansch.
Alexander Vlaskamp: ‘The drives of the future are being created in Nuremberg. Not only are we developing batteries here, but in a few months' time we will also be using the latest technologies to mass-produce them. The topping-out ceremony is an important milestone for our company on the road to the major transformation towards electromobility. And it is also a clear commitment by MAN to Bavaria and Germany as a business location. This was made possible by close collaboration between the company, our works council and Bavarian politicians.’
Over 50 manual and automated assembly stations and seven test benches for quality assurance will be installed on an area of 17,000 square metres. The installation of the first production systems has already begun. From April 2025, up to 50,000 batteries per year will be built in an initial expansion phase. Depending on how the market develops, this capacity is to be expanded to up to 100,000 high-voltage batteries by 2030. At over 35 metres high, the new building is the tallest production building at the site.
Ingo Essel, Head of the MAN site in Nuremberg: ‘The entry into electromobility is a decisive step into the future for our site. We have decades of expertise in the development and production of engines and are now also ideally placed to establish ourselves as a centre of excellence for alternative drive technologies.’
The Free State of Bavaria is also funding further development and research into battery technology with around 30 million euros. Among other things, this has enabled the integration of innovative laser welding cells. Laser welding is the most innovative, efficient and gentle production technology in battery module construction. With a powerful 8 kW disc laser, robot-guided optics and ultra-fine sensors, individual battery cells are electrically connected to each other with the highest precision and quality. Together with the Technical University (TU) of Munich, MAN is researching the further development of this technology, which will be used in a future generation of batteries.