TL; DR
- BYD’s new Blade Battery charges from 10% to 97% in just nine minutes, rivalling petrol refill times.
- Energy density is up 40% over the previous generation, with over 1,000 km of claimed range on a single charge.
- BYD is rolling out 20,000 Flash Charging stations across China by end of 2026, with global expansion confirmed.
For years, the single biggest knock on electric vehicles has been simple: they take too long to charge. BYD just made a very loud argument that this era might be over.
At its “Disruptive Technology” event in Shenzhen on March 5, 2026, the world’s largest new energy vehicle manufacturer unveiled the second generation of its Blade Battery alongside a new Flash Charging system capable of delivering up to 1,500 kW. It’s the first major upgrade to the Blade Battery since it first appeared in 2020 — and if the numbers stack up in the real world, it’s a big one.
The Charging Numbers
Charge from 10% to 70% in 5 minutes. Full to 97% in 9. To put that in perspective, you’d spend longer waiting for your order at a petrol station café. And if you’re nowhere near a Flash Charger, you still benefit — on standard charging infrastructure, it also charges 30-50% faster than conventional EV batteries.
Cold weather performance has also been meaningfully addressed. Even at -30°C, a 20% to 97% charge takes just 15 minutes — only three minutes longer than at room temperature. For anyone who’s ever watched their EV range collapse on a winter morning, that’s a notable improvement.
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What’s Actually Changed Inside
The original Blade Battery was already well-regarded for its thermal stability and safety credentials. The second generation builds on the same lithium iron phosphate foundation but goes considerably further. BYD spent six years working on it, with the central challenge being something the industry has wrestled with for a long time — how do you make a battery charge faster without sacrificing energy density or safety?

Their answer is what they’re calling the FlashPass Ion Transport System, which reworks the cathode, electrolyte, and anode at a material level to move ions faster and generate less heat under extreme charge rates. Energy density has jumped to between 190 and 210 Wh/kg — roughly a 40% improvement over the previous generation. BYD has also bumped up the guaranteed capacity retention rate and is now offering a lifetime warranty on the battery cells themselves.
On safety, the battery passed a nail penetration test after 500 fast-charging cycles without catching fire, and survived a bottom impact test at ten times the force required by China’s national standards.
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What About Range?
The Yangwang U7, fitted with a 150 kWh pack, claims 1,006 km of range under CLTC testing — up from around 600 km with the first-generation battery. The Denza Z9 GT edges that out to 1,036 km. CLTC figures tend to be optimistic, but even at a significant real-world discount, the numbers are compelling.
The Charging Network
A better battery only matters if there’s somewhere to charge it. BYD’s Flash Charging stations deliver up to 1,500 kW at 1,000V, with a T-shaped connector design that can reach either side of the vehicle. To avoid overloading the grid, each station uses onsite energy storage batteries to buffer demand — essentially acting as a power bank that charges slowly from the grid and discharges rapidly into your car.

BYD has already installed over 4,200 stations across China and is targeting 20,000 by end of 2026, including 2,000 highway stations spaced 100 km apart. And yes, like a petrol station, they’ll charge an idle fee if you leave your car plugged in after it’s done.
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What It Means for EV Buyers and the Industry
Charging speed and range anxiety are consistently the two biggest reasons people don’t switch to EVs. This announcement takes direct aim at both. Perhaps more significantly, BYD has confirmed plans to bring this technology to mainstream models priced between 100,000 and 200,000 yuan by end of 2026 — so it won’t stay confined to expensive flagship vehicles for long.
For rival manufacturers, particularly those still working with older battery platforms, the pressure to respond is real. In Europe, the Denza Z9 GT will be the first model to arrive with Blade Battery 2.0 and Flash Charging onboard.
BYD hasn’t said when any of this reaches India. But with the Atto 3, Seal, Sealion 7, and eMax 7 already on sale here, the brand clearly has skin in the game. This technology will follow — the only real question is how long it takes.
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And when it does, it lands in a market that still hasn’t fully sorted its charging infrastructure, which makes the timing either perfectly awkward or perfectly opportune, depending on how you look at it. Either way, nine minutes from near-empty to full is the kind of number that makes fence-sitters pay attention.

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