Panasonic is betting 500 billion yen that energy storage and electronic components for AI data centers will become its next growth engine.
Panasonic plans to invest about 500 billion yen ($3.1 billion) over two years in energy storage systems and electronic components for AI data centers, targeting 1.4 trillion yen in related sales within three years.
"GPUs that power AI servers consume enormous amounts of electricity, and our storage battery systems play a key role in smoothing peak demand," Chief Executive Officer Yuki Kusumi said in an interview.
The Japanese conglomerate is expanding global job cuts to as many as 12,000 positions, up from an initial plan of 10,000, and expects annual cost savings of 145 billion yen starting from the fiscal year ending March 2025. Panasonic will also convert an underutilized US factory originally built for Tesla EV battery production into a manufacturing site for uninterruptible power supply systems.
Panasonic shares have doubled this year, pushing its market capitalization to about 11.5 trillion yen — a record high. The company aims to generate 30 percent of revenue from AI-related businesses within a decade, signaling a strategic shift away from consumer electronics and its role as a primary Tesla battery supplier.
Energy Storage Becomes the AI Data Center Bottleneck
AI data centers powered by Nvidia's H100 and Blackwell GPUs can draw 30 to 70 kilowatts per rack, far exceeding the 5 to 10 kilowatts typical of traditional server rooms. Panasonic's lithium-ion battery systems are designed to absorb demand spikes and provide backup power, a capability that cloud operators including major US hyperscalers are increasingly prioritizing as grid capacity tightens.
The strategy aligns with a broader Japanese AI supply chain boom. Memory chip maker Kioxia Holdings and fiber optic cable manufacturer Fujikura have also benefited from surging AI-related demand, while the Bank of Japan has cited strong AI exports as a tailwind for the economy.
Repurposing Tesla Assets for the AI Era
The conversion of Panasonic's US factory from EV battery production to uninterruptible power supply manufacturing marks a strategic pivot. The facility, located in Nevada, was built to supply battery cells for Tesla's electric vehicles but has operated below capacity as EV demand growth slowed.
By redirecting that manufacturing capacity toward AI data center infrastructure, Panasonic is following a playbook similar to South Korea's Samsung and SK Hynix, which together announced 800 trillion won ($518 billion) in new chip fabrication investments on June 29 to meet AI-driven memory demand. South Korean President Lee Jae-myung described semiconductors, physical AI, and AI data centers as the "three pillars" of the country's next leap forward.
Panasonic has also partnered with AI company Anthropic as part of its plan to embed AI across its software and hardware portfolio. Kusumi described the next six years in two phases: the first three focused on capturing the current AI infrastructure buildout, and the following three on turning those businesses into sustainable growth pillars.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.