U.S. faces hurdles in push to build electric vehicle
supply chain
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[May 14, 2019]
By Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - The United States faces stiff
challenges as it moves to create its own electric vehicle supply chain,
industry analysts say, with the extent of the country's metal reserves
largely unknown and only a few facilities to process minerals and
produce batteries.
Legislation making its way through the U.S. Congress aims to help offset
those gaps, but China remains the global EV sector leader, a dominance
seen by some as difficult to supplant.
"China has a huge head start," said Gavin Montgomery, a battery and
mining analyst at the Wood Mackenzie consultancy. "They've just been at
this a lot longer than the rest of the world."
U.S. Senator Lisa Murkowski, chair of the Senate's Energy and Natural
Resources Committee, earlier this month introduced the American Mineral
Security Act to help streamline regulation and permitting requirements
for the development of mines for lithium, graphite and other EV
minerals.
The bipartisan legislation, which seeks in part to codify a late 2017
executive order on U.S. mineral development by President Donald Trump,
gets its first hearing before Murkowski's committee on Tuesday.
"We have an opportunity here to move ourselves from this position of
vulnerability in terms of reliance on others for our minerals, our EV
supply chain," said Murkowski, an Alaska Republican.
But just how much cobalt and other minerals used to make EVs are
actually in the United States is anyone's guess, as the nation has
conducted little by way of a national survey.
Current estimates from the U.S. Geological Survey rely on corporate
annual reports, historical data from the U.S. Bureau of Mines and other
sources, according to USGS spokesman Alex Demas.
Finding out the mineral composition of a particular region requires
sending staff into the field to take rock samples, a timely and
expensive endeavor. Murkowski's legislation would require a nationwide
reserve analysis for all minerals used to make EVs.
USGS data show, for example, that the United States has 35,000 tonnes of
lithium in reserve, a figure that the agency and industry executives see
as conservative.
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A sign at the approach road leads to Albemarle's lithium evaporation
ponds at its facility in Silver Peak, Nevada, U.S., January 9, 2019.
REUTERS/Ernest Scheyder
Albemarle Corp operates the only U.S. lithium mine, a facility with the capacity
to produce about 6,000 tonnes annually. According to current USGS data, that
means that one mine could deplete U.S. reserves within six years.
Several lithium projects are under development across the nation, including
those from ioneer Ltd, Lithium Americas Corp and Piedmont Lithium Ltd. Each aims
to produce at least 20,000 tonnes of lithium per year, according to corporate
presentations.
Beyond physical reserves, concerns about the lack of U.S. processing facilities
are also cause for worry.
China controls about 85 percent of the globe's cobalt sulfate processing,
according to WoodMac data. Cobalt sulfate is the version of the metal used in
lithium ion batteries.
eCobalt Solutions Inc aims to produce 1,500 tonnes per year of cobalt once its
Idaho project opens, though that is only enough of the metal to make about
300,000 EVs.
The United States does have some processing capability. Albemarle and rival
Livent Corp process some lithium domestically. Syrah Resources Ltd mines
graphite in Mozambique and ships it to Louisiana for processing for use in
making battery parts.
But those facilities tend to be the exception and investors so far have been
wary of funding new U.S. projects in part due to China's dominance, with
concerns that any investment would be difficult to recoup.
"Ultimately, these projects have to stack up economically, even if U.S.
politicians make it easier to get permitting," said WoodMac's Montgomery.
GRAPHIC: Lithium projects underway in the United States - https://tmsnrt.rs/2CXdGWN
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder; 00Editing by Dan Grebler)
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