It's a bit early to dictate battery standardization, as doing such would be picking winners and losers. If we had done such a thing a decade ago, we'd have a design that may not accommodate thermal regulation, and that regulation is what makes Tesla's batteries something that will outlast the car itself.
A little more than a decade ago, the pack included in a model S cost more than the car was sold for. 2010 avg cost for capacity was $1,100 per kw/hr, averaging something like $137 for the same capacity last year and google links an article stating that there have been some sales at less than $100 per kw/hr.
There may not be incentive at some point for fast swapping batteries industrial forklift style. The trouble with the swapping idea is that it will increase the cost at least two fold over having a permanent pack - suddenly, you have infrastructure that wasn't used before, insurance, liability, taxes, regulatory compliance, etc. I don't see it coming to fruition - it made sense only when cars had to be charged overnight.
There will probably be a secondary market for the thermally managed packs, too. If telsa considers a 100kw/hr pack no longer usable at 90kw/hr, wouldn't you like to have it to manage power? Anywhere here in the states where tiered power is sold (california can have sky high top tier costs for heavy users), such a thing would pay for itself quickly. If you were a generation further in the future with cars and had two used packs installed stationary in your house, pulling power only when it was cheap and kicking on when it's expensive, you could end up with some absurd amount of power on hand - 150 or 200 kw/hr, and the duty for the batteries would be gentler than a car.
A little more than a decade ago, the pack included in a model S cost more than the car was sold for. 2010 avg cost for capacity was $1,100 per kw/hr, averaging something like $137 for the same capacity last year and google links an article stating that there have been some sales at less than $100 per kw/hr.
There may not be incentive at some point for fast swapping batteries industrial forklift style. The trouble with the swapping idea is that it will increase the cost at least two fold over having a permanent pack - suddenly, you have infrastructure that wasn't used before, insurance, liability, taxes, regulatory compliance, etc. I don't see it coming to fruition - it made sense only when cars had to be charged overnight.
There will probably be a secondary market for the thermally managed packs, too. If telsa considers a 100kw/hr pack no longer usable at 90kw/hr, wouldn't you like to have it to manage power? Anywhere here in the states where tiered power is sold (california can have sky high top tier costs for heavy users), such a thing would pay for itself quickly. If you were a generation further in the future with cars and had two used packs installed stationary in your house, pulling power only when it was cheap and kicking on when it's expensive, you could end up with some absurd amount of power on hand - 150 or 200 kw/hr, and the duty for the batteries would be gentler than a car.