Rank of Batteries from an environmental perspective

If you rank car batteries from an environmental perspective across the full lifecycle — raw materials, manufacturing, safety, lifespan, recycling, and long-term sustainability — the picture looks roughly like this today:

RankingBattery TypeEnvironmental RatingWhy
1LFP (Lithium Iron Phosphate)⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐No cobalt/nickel, long lifespan, low fire risk, relatively low climate impact
2Sodium-ion⭐⭐⭐⭐½No lithium or cobalt, abundant raw materials, very promising
3Lithium-sulfur⭐⭐⭐⭐½Very low theoretical environmental impact and high energy density, but still immature
4Solid-state⭐⭐⭐Potentially safer and more energy-dense, but currently higher production impact and difficult recycling
5NMC / NCA (Nickel-Cobalt based)⭐⭐High energy density but larger environmental issues around nickel/cobalt mining and higher CO₂ footprint
6Lead-acidHeavy metals, low energy density, short lifespan

1. LFP – the best overall today

Common in standard-range Tesla models, BYD vehicles, and many affordable/mid-range EVs.

Advantages

  • No cobalt or nickel
  • Lower manufacturing emissions
  • Very long lifespan
  • High safety and low fire risk
  • Handles many charge cycles well

Disadvantages

  • Heavier
  • Lower energy density → slightly shorter range

Studies indicate that LFP batteries can produce around 60% lower emissions during manufacturing compared to NMC batteries.

2. Sodium-ion – potentially the future environmental winner

A very promising technology.

Advantages

  • Does not require lithium
  • No cobalt/nickel
  • Sodium is extremely abundant
  • Cheaper and geopolitically less sensitive

Disadvantages

  • Lower energy density than current lithium batteries
  • Still early in commercialization

Could become especially attractive for:

  • Small EVs
  • Stationary energy storage
  • Lower-cost EV segments

3. Lithium-sulfur – potentially extremely environmentally friendly

Research suggests very low environmental impact.

Advantages

  • Extremely high energy density
  • Reduced dependence on critical metals
  • Potentially very low climate footprint

Disadvantages

  • Short lifespan today
  • Not yet mature for mass-market use

4. Solid-state – somewhat overrated environmentally for now

Many people assume solid-state batteries are automatically the greenest option — that is not necessarily true.

Advantages

  • High safety
  • Potentially very high energy density
  • Fast charging capability

Disadvantages

  • Some designs require silver and advanced materials
  • Recycling remains difficult
  • High manufacturing impact today

Several studies indicate that current solid-state concepts may actually have a higher climate impact than modern lithium-ion batteries.

5. NMC/NCA – best for range, weaker for sustainability

Common in premium vehicles:

  • BMW
  • Mercedes-Benz
  • Volvo Cars
  • older Tesla models

Advantages

  • High energy density
  • Long driving range
  • Excellent performance

Disadvantages

  • Nickel and cobalt mining impacts
  • Higher CO₂ footprint
  • Geopolitical and ethical concerns
  • Higher fire risk

Recycling is becoming increasingly important

The EU Battery Regulation is pushing the industry toward:

  • Higher recycled material content
  • Recovery of lithium, nickel, and cobalt
  • Full battery traceability

By 2030, a significant portion of new batteries sold in Europe must contain recycled materials.

My overall ranking for 2026

Battery TypeEnvironmental Performance TodayFuture PotentialOverall Assessment
LFP9/108/10Best today
Sodium-ion8/1010/10Most promising
Lithium-sulfur7/1010/10Could become revolutionary
Solid-state5/108/10Uncertain
NMC/NCA4/106/10Efficient but resource-intensive
Lead-acid1/101/10Outdated