CATL Predicts Fully Electric Ocean-Going Ships Within Three Years, Transforming Maritime Transport

December 6, 2025
CATL Predicts Fully Electric Ocean-Going Ships Within Three Years, Transforming Maritime Transport
  • CATL predicts that fully electric ships could navigate open oceans within about three years, signaling a major shift toward ocean-going marine electrification.

  • The company’s marine division is pursuing electrification of ocean-going vessels within roughly three years, building on inland and coastal projects and partnerships.

  • During a Shanghai briefing, Su Yiyi, head of CATL’s marine division, reiterated that pure-electric vessels capable of open-sea navigation may be achievable within three years.

  • Advances in battery energy density are enabling longer ranges and more power for larger vessels, supporting the push toward electric maritime operations.

  • CATL has shipped batteries for more than 900 vessels, including flagship projects like the Yangtze River Three Gorges 1 cruise and the Qinggang Tug 1, illustrating broad deployment of electric maritime solutions.

  • The company has developed a comprehensive ship-battery replenishment system with containerized power, high-power charging, battery swapping, and a cloud-based information platform to optimize efficiency and economics.

  • A full-spectrum strategy aims to electrify maritime and aviation sectors, leveraging sodium-ion batteries to cut costs and enable longer-range electric shipping.

  • CATL’s collaboration with major shipping partners, including Maersk, and efforts toward decarbonizing ports and shipping infrastructure, highlight a broader industry move to zero-carbon maritime transport.

  • CATL has a proven track record in marine electrification, powering electric boats since 2017 and establishing a marine-focused subsidiary in 2022, now supplying batteries to about 900 vessels and capturing a sizable share of the global market.

  • Historically, CATL’s electric vessels operated in safer waterways such as rivers and coastlines, with projects like Yangtze River Three Gorges No. 1 in 2020 using 10,000 LFP battery cells.

  • In 2024, China’s first pure-electric tourist vessel, the Yujian 77, co-developed with CATL, exemplified the trajectory toward larger electric ships capable of ocean travel.

  • Lower battery costs and advances in sodium-ion technology could enable long-range electric ships with ranges up to about 5,000 kilometers using current chemistries, without significant weight or volume penalties.

Summary based on 2 sources


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