Qichao Hu
Analyst · Water Tower Research. Shawn, your line is now open
Thank you, Eric. Good afternoon everyone and thanks for taking the time to join our first earnings call. Its been a very busy and exciting time for our company. In early February, we completed the merger with Ivanhoe Capital Acquisition Corp., and started trading on the New York Stock Exchange. The merger resulted in a total cash position of $426 million at the end of first quarter. This event was the culmination of a 10-year journey that began in the basement of a Building Four at MIT and I believe the best is yet to come. I cannot say thank you enough to all of our employees at our Boston headquarters, SES Korea, and Shanghai Giga. The automotive industry is going through a rapid change. In the past year, almost every major country and carmaker in the world has announced that they plan to electrify their entire fleet to address climate change. High energy density and more costs batteries are key. This is why we believe lithium metal batteries are the next big thing. We are the first and only next-gen lithium metal companies to have three A-simple joint development agreements, JDAs, with global carmakers; General Motors, Hyundai, and Honda, and strategic investors included six carmakers GM, Honda, Hyundai, Geely, Shanghai Auto, and Foxconn, as well as Coke, SK, LG, [indiscernible] Lithium, and Applied Materials. We live in an increasingly volatile world. Rapid increases in demand for lithium and other raw materials as well as geopolitics have created great disruptions in the supply chain. Going forward, a sustainable supply chain strategy and innovative business model will be crucial. So, first, let's talk about lithium metal batteries. We have made significant progress in all three of our technology platforms and our on-track with our A-sample JDAs. Let me go through more details. So, first, it's Hermes, a platform for material development. Our Boston headquarter has developed several new generations of electrolytes. With each generation we get one step closer to meeting our OEM partners' complex setup requirements, ranging from safety to cycle life, to temperature, performance to power, density, storage and so on. We're confident that we can meet the OEM A-sample specifications in the next 12 months, which will allow us to transition to B-samples. Second is Apollo, engineering capability for large automotive cells. Manufacturability is core to our lithium metal system approach. We want to use lithium-ion equipment and process to make lithium metal cells. Most of the EV batteries used in the U.S. today were developed in Korea, China, and Japan during their A-sample stage. This is why we chose to do A-sample large cell development in China and Korea, the hub of lithium-ion cell engineering, manufacturing, and supply chain. This is also reflected in our CapEx spending this year. Later, our CFO, Jing will talk about more. It's in line with mature lithium-ion CapEx investment. This will pave the way for eventually building large manufacturing plants in North America for C-samples and ultimately, the start of production, SOP. We announced construction of Shanghai Giga last November at our First Battery World and unveiled the world's first 100 Ah power lithium-metal battery. I am very excited to announce that we have completed Shanghai Giga Phase 1 this March and achieved Ready-to-Use, RTU. The facility is now capable of producing 0.2 gigawatt hours of large lithium metal cells of 50 Ah power and 100 Ah and we plan to reach one gigawatt hour in Phase 2 next year. We have begun building and testing these large lithium metal A-simple prototype cells and sharing data with our OEM JDA partners. We even started implementing AIoT artificial intelligence of Things devices and data collection on our production lines for quality control. Our Shanghai team deserves a lot of appreciation. Two years ago, during the peak of COVID when we cut everyone's salary, not a single person left. Recently because of lockdowns, our Shanghai Giga facility was down for more than a month, but when it reopened, our team immediately volunteered to go back and now they eat, sleep, and work in the factory. No other facility in the world can match Shanghai Giga for lithium metal battery production. We currently have two A-sample OEM JDAs out of Shanghai Giga and other top global OEMs have expressed interest in forming a A-sample JDAs that will be sourced from this facility. We also started construction of SES Korea and expect to achieve Ready-to-Use RTU by the end of this year. You'll have similar capabilities as China Giga initially at a smaller scale but eventually grow to a similar scale. We partnered with our longtime equipment vendor to fully leverage the manufacturer ability of lithium ion equipment and process to build lithium metal cells. Now, we serve one A-sample OEM JDA out of SES Korea and expect over time to serve additional OEM JDAs. Our Korea team also works through spring festival and other holidays to build and test A-sample prototype cells for our OEM JDA partner. Third is avatar, AI software for battery health monitoring. Our Boston headquarter team developed several new algorithms that can accurately predict battery health by monitoring, electrochemical, thermal, and mechanical data. The goal is to monitor the growth of mossy lithium due to cycling and manufacturing defects and predict failure. We also partnered with a world leading AI company, a blockchain platform company, and an AIoT data collection company for data management and algorithm implementation. While it's impossible to make any battery 100% safe, especially high energy density ones like our lithium metal, 400 kg and 100 Ah, our goal is to make the user experience 100% safe through inherently safer materials, that Hermes. Cell engineering, that's Apollo and AI software, that's Avatar. And monitor mossy lithium growth 24/7 and predict failure. Second, let's talk about the supply chain. We expect to transition from A-samples to B-samples in the next 12 months. As we prepare for the transition, we are focused on what is also the industry's biggest concern, the supply chain, which has been impacted by the global lithium rush and geopolitics. It is estimated that most, if not all, of mature producing lithium mines around the world already have their offtake committed until 2026. And many junior mines are at least eight years away from production. So, how do we secure supply and how can we build independent regional supply chains to meet geopolitical challenges are the key questions. We are participating in building two independent supply chains and balancing commercial efficiency with geopolitical concerns. So, the first is a China inclusive supply chain. Politics aside, China today has the world's most complete and efficient EV battery supply chain and the biggest talent pool and EV market. Since the number one priority for EVs is low cost and manufacturability is core to our lithium metal battery systems approach. We built our Shanghai facility in 2019, not far from the Tesla and CATL Shanghai Giga and expanded it to Shanghai Giga in 2021 to leverage this supply chain and talent pool. We are supported by several global OEMs and will continue to develop A-samples with our OEM partners in Shanghai. We also plan to establish strategic partnerships with key materials suppliers over the next year, especially for our thin lithium metal foil and lithium salt for our proprietary electrolyte. Second is a China-free supply chain. Outside of China, especially, for the North American and European markets, we are working with our partners and strategic investors to build a China free regional supply chain. Korea, with the world's second most complete and efficient EV battery supply chain, is the best choice, especially for A-sample development. We started partnering with our Korean equipment vendor in 2015 and started to build SES Korea in January 2022. We are currently supported by one global OEM JDA partner, and several advanced materials and equipment partners. We also plan to transfer our learnings in China and Korea to build an EV battery supply chain in North America, including mining, battery materials, battery manufacturing, vehicle integration, and recycling. While A-sample lines are in China and Korea, our C-sample and startup production will likely be in North America. And third, alternative strategies. In addition to the supply chain strategy as previously mentioned, we also started developing recycling capability for mossy lithium and exploring new business models such as battery-as-a-service, which will leverage the data analytics capabilities of our Avatar AI software. These alternative strategies will be done in collaboration with our OEM partners and strategic investors. There's no silver bullet to addressing supply chain issues. There'll be a combination of approaches. And finally, in summary, we are dealing with a complex problem that requires a system approach. We're confident that within the next 12 months, we will number one, deliver and optimize A-samples for our three JDA partners. Number two, begin to transition from A-samples to B-samples. And number three, continue to establish supply chains for key materials. All of these targeted milestones will help pave the way to achieve our goal to build our first commercial production plant in North America. I'll now pass the call to Jing Nealiss, our CFO who will take us through the financials.