BMW, Samsung SDI & Solid Power: The Triple Alliance That Could Win the Solid-State Battery Race

BMW: BMW, Solid Power and Samsung SDI have formalized a joint validation and development effort to accelerate all-solid-state batteries (ASSBs). The deal pairs a legacy automaker with a U.S. solid-electrolyte developer and a major Korean cell manufacturer- a combination that could solve practical engineering, scale and supply-chain hurdles faster than any single firm alone. Below is an in-depth, reader-friendly explainer of what this alliance is, why it matters, and how the players complement one another.

BMW

BMW: What are solid-state batteries

Most EV batteries today use lithium-ion cells with a liquid electrolyte. Solid-state batteries replace that liquid with a solid electrolyte — think of it as switching from juice to a solid conductor. That change promises three big improvements:

  • Higher energy density — more range for the same weight/volume.
  • Better safety — solid electrolytes are less flammable than liquid ones, lowering fire risk.
  • Faster charging and longer life — potential improvements in cycle life and charge rates, depending on chemistry and engineering.

What the alliance is – facts, in plain terms

BMW
  • Who: BMW Group (automaker), Solid Power (U.S. developer of solid electrolytes and cell designs), and Samsung SDI (global battery cell manufacturer).
  • What: A joint validation and development agreement to advance ASSB cells, to demonstrate technology in vehicles and build global value chains across materials, cells and automobiles. The collaboration expands previous two-way work between BMW and Solid Power by adding Samsung SDI’s manufacturing expertise.
  • When: Announced late Oct–early Nov 2025 (press releases and industry coverage around Oct 30–Nov 6, 2025).

How the three partners complement one another

PartnerCore strengthWhat they bring to the alliance
BMWVehicle integration, battery systems, testing & OEM know-howVehicle validation, system integration standards, mass-market requirements, test vehicles (BMW has already tested Solid Power large-format cells in an i7).
Solid PowerSolid electrolyte materials and cell designs (AS S B developer)Proprietary solid electrolyte chemistry and cell engineering; earlier pilot cells and R&D roadmaps.
Samsung SDILarge-scale manufacturing experience, process engineeringAbility to scale cell manufacturing, supply-chain relationships, process transfer & optimization for mass production.

BMW, Samsung SDI & Solid Power

TopicKey point
PartiesBMW Group, Solid Power (US), Samsung SDI (Korea).
Type of collaborationJoint evaluation/validation, technology transfer, vehicle testing.
Near-term aimValidate all-solid-state cells in demo vehicles and develop value chain.
Why it mattersCombines OEM integration, proprietary cell tech, and manufacturing scale.
Main hurdlesManufacturing yield, cost, durability, materials supply.
WatchpointsPilot production, BMW vehicle test data, Samsung SDI scale plans, supply deals.

Conclusion

This Power alliance is one of the most strategically sensible moves we’ve seen in the ASSB landscape: it pairs specialised chemistry with real vehicle testing and industrial production capability. That combination increases the likelihood that solid-state cells will move from promising demos to validated vehicle systems — and eventually scale.

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