Panasonic is shopping for a plant location for its own U.S. mammoth battery factory, according to a Friday report from Japan’s national public broadcasting network NHK.
The battery supplier is shopping for land for the “mega factory” either in Oklahoma or Kansas, according to the report, with a planned investment of several billion dollars just to build it.
The plant could be conceived for the purpose of “mass producing new high-capacity lithium-ion batteries that significantly increase the range of EVs,” NHK suggested.
If in either of those states, the factory would be close enough to serve as a primary supplier for Tesla’s new plant in Austin, Texas, where most of the products are expected to use the larger 4680-format cylindrical cells that Tesla championed at its 2020 Battery Day. Tulsa, Oklahoma, had been a finalist for the Tesla facility.

Cylindrical cells – Panasonic hinting at 4680 progress
Panasonic just earlier this week made official its pending production of the 4680 format
That hasn’t stopped Tesla from ramping up its own production of the format at a pilot production facility in California. Tesla revealed that it hit a cumulative million
![Tesla Gigafactory in Sparks, Nevada [CREDIT - YouTube user California Phantom] Tesla Gigafactory in Sparks, Nevada [CREDIT - YouTube user California Phantom]](https://world-of-cars.net/wp-content/uploads/2022/03/report-panasonic-considering-oklahoma-or-kansas-for-us-battery-plant-1.jpg)
Tesla Gigafactory in Sparks, Nevada [CREDIT – YouTube user California Phantom]
Tesla and Panasonic have been closely interwoven for more than a decade. It was an early investor in Tesla, exclusively sourced cells for the Model S and Model Y, and then in 2014 announced they’d be collaborating on the Nevada Gigafactory that supplies cells for the U.S.-built Model 3 and Model Y. Tesla re-upped its long-term relationship with Panasonic in 2020, but Panasonic sold its Tesla stake in 2021.