Distorted accounting obscures real propulsion costs, rare-earth dependency, and emerging alternatives
BOSTON, MA, UNITED STATES, February 16, 2026 /EINPresswire.com/ — A newly released technical analysis finds that many widely cited electric motor system (e-motor) market reports substantially understate the true size of the electric-vehicle (EV) propulsion e-motor market, leading to misleading conclusions about cost, technology maturity, and rare-earth dependence.
According to the analysis, the distortion arises from narrow accounting practices that count only externally sourced, stand-alone motors while systematically excluding three dominant contributors to EV propulsion systems: in-house motor production by original equipment manufacturers (OEMs), fully integrated drive units combining motors with power electronics and gear reduction, and large portions of Chinese domestic manufacturing.
As a result, some reports conclude that EV traction e-motors represent approximately one percent of permanent-magnet (PM) e-motor demand. This conclusion contradicts basic unit-count economics and observed global EV production. In particular, reports often simultaneously claim that more than 85–90 percent of EV traction motors rely on rare-earth permanent magnets, yet estimate the EV motor market at under US$1 billion while projecting a US$75 billion permanent-magnet motor market overall—a discrepancy exceeding a factor of 100× that cannot be reconciled by legitimate segmentation or reasonable average selling price assumptions.
The disconnect becomes evident when examining commercially available EV propulsion systems. Integrated rare-earth permanent-magnet drive units in the 150-kilowatt class are priced near US$70–75 per kilowatt even at scale, benefiting from their state-sponsored rare-earth supply conditions. Yet automated online summaries and secondary sources frequently cite figures near US$20 per kilowatt—levels that fall below the combined cost of copper, electrical steel, magnets, insulation, and power electronics and are therefore physically and economically infeasible.
From a physics standpoint, the analysis explains, all asymmetric electric motors with passive rotors—including permanent-magnet, induction, reluctance, and field-wound synchronous machines—converge toward similar torque-speed and efficiency limits when optimally designed using comparable materials, cooling methods, and manufacturing processes. Absent rare-earth subsidies, these architectures also converge toward similar cost structures. This convergence has driven many major EV OEMs to internalize motor production, further masking true system costs from third-party market surveys.
Growing geopolitical risk, concentrated rare-earth supply chains, and escalating magnet costs have prompted OEMs to seek rare-earth-free alternatives. However, nearly all commercially proposed alternatives remain asymmetric e-motors constrained by passive-rotor physics and therefore deliver only incremental performance gains through established packaging techniques.
Against this backdrop, the report highlights the emergence of symmetric, active-rotor electric-motor architectures as a distinct departure from conventional designs. Unlike passive-rotor systems, symmetric architectures allow both stator and rotor to contribute independent working electromagnetic power, enabling a genuine step-change in performance rather than incremental gains through packaging.
When combined with axial-flux form factors, established packaging techniques, and scalable manufacturing methods, such active-rotor systems break the long-standing performance-cost parity inherent to passive-rotor electric motors.
One example cited is SYNCHRO-SYM™, a rare-earth-free symmetric active-rotor electric-motor architecture developed by Best Electric Machine (BEM). Based on BEM’s internal CAD-driven cost modeling, a 150-kilowatt-class SYNCHRO-SYM system is projected at approximately US$57 per kilowatt after commercialization, while delivering higher torque density without permanent magnets or gearbox maintenance penalties.
A brief technical overview explaining the physics and system-level advantages of symmetric active-rotor electric-motor architectures is available at https://youtu.be/TJgzSnfsqJU.
About Best Electric Machine
Best Electric Machine (BEM) is a U.S.-based electric-machine technology company focused on rare-earth-free propulsion systems. BEM’s SYNCHRO-SYM™ architecture and reprogrammable MOTORPRINTER™ manufacturing platform enable symmetric, active-rotor electric machines designed to improve performance, reduce cost, and eliminate dependence on rare-earth permanent magnets.
Press Desk
Engineering Device, Inc., DBA Best Electric Machine
email us here
Legal Disclaimer:
EIN Presswire provides this news content “as is” without warranty of any kind. We do not accept any responsibility or liability
for the accuracy, content, images, videos, licenses, completeness, legality, or reliability of the information contained in this
article. If you have any complaints or copyright issues related to this article, kindly contact the author above.
![]()


























