Miners face supply chain overhaul to meet U.S. EV credit deadline
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[August 12, 2022]
By Clara Denina
(Reuters) - Miners will struggle to expand
operations in the United States in record time to meet a deadline for
sourcing key minerals domestically or from select countries as set out
by a bill likely to be passed on Friday, companies and industry watchers
said.
The requirement is part of a sweeping bill that includes climate and
clean energy policies and rules on electric vehicle (EV) battery
materials such as cobalt, lithium, nickel and graphite. The U.S. House
of Representatives is set to vote nL1N2ZJ02X on the measure Friday.
"Considering it takes seven years to build a mine and refining plant but
only 24 months to build a battery plant, the best part of this decade is
needed to establish an entirely new industry in the United States," said
Simon Moores, chief executive of Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.
The Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) includes a $7,500 tax credit for new
electric vehicles, but to win the full credit, EV makers have to source
in 2023 at least two-fifths of battery materials from the United States
or free trade agreement (FTA) partners such as Canada, Chile and
Australia or recycle it in North America.
The guidelines exclude Indonesia and Argentina, two providers of key
metals - nickel and lithium respectively - and increase the material
sourcing target to 80% by 2026. Automakers had pressed Congress to
expand the number of eligible nations.
"The most feasible option is to use recycling ... yet the impact of
recycling will be very limited when there are barely any EVs coming off
the road," said Max Reid, analyst at WoodMac Battery Raw Materials
Service.
The United States is home to some of the world's largest automakers,
including Ford Motor and General Motors, as well as automotive parts
suppliers, but limited home-grown battery manufacturing and refining
capacity.
Top lithium producer Albemarle Corp, which aims to build a lithium
processing facility in the U.S. Southeast later this decade, said the
bill is a "positive step" toward attracting investment for a domestic
supply chain.
"The conditions and timeline for the credit on electric vehicles is
challenging as the battery industry largely operates in Asia and the
domestic supply chain is in early development," an Albemarle
spokesperson said.
"Our Kings Mountain mine project and proposed Southeast meg-flex
production site will help move the U.S. supply chain forward, but this
will take time."
Global major Rio Tinto, which has refining and smelting operations in
Utah and Canada, said it "welcomed the provisions on domestic extraction
and processing" and was working with auto sector customers.
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General view of Nevada Copper's Pumpkin
Hollow copper mine in Yerington, Nevada, U.S., January 10, 2019.
REUTERS/Bob Strong/File Photo
Other major EV metal miners, such as copper miner Freeport-McMoran
and Glencore, declined to comment.
New U.S. mining projects have faced stiff opposition from local
communities and environmentalists, underscoring the broader tension
in the United States as resistance to living near a mine clashes
with the potential of EVs to mitigate climate change.
Chile's Antofagasta, for example, saw the leases for its proposed
Twin Metals copper and nickel mine in Minnesota canceled by the U.S.
Department of the Interior in January on environmental grounds,
while the White House last year said it planned a 20-year ban on
mining in Minnesota's Boundary Waters region, where Antofagasta
hopes to build an underground mine.
"The view that you need to source domestically ... will start to
prevail and be more significant," Antofagasta Chief Executive Ivan
Arriagada told Reuters.
"It's grounded on national security considerations, on the
challenges posed by the energy transition and there is no way the
world is going to get to carbon neutrality by 2050 unless there is
more raw materials.
"There is a contradiction there but the wave seems to be moving in
the direction of realizing that these projects need to be done."
Efforts by the United States and Europe to build an independent
supply chain for the key minerals used in EVs have accelerated with
heightened tensions between the West and China and Russia, while the
COVID-19 pandemic highlighted the risks from supply chain shutdowns
and shortages.
Companies are under pressure to reduce their carbon footprint but
complex battery supply chains require materials cross multiple
continents in different stages of processing before a finished
battery ends up in an EV.
Last year, the White House said it would rely on allies to secure
the minerals needed for EV batteries, noting at the time that the
country "cannot and does not need to mine and process all critical
battery inputs at home." [L1N2N034B]
"Since the market is global in nature and spot prices predominate,
the larger effect (of the bill) is to push firms serving the U.S.
market to deepen investments into relevant FTA partners, namely
Canada and Australia," said Fitch Solutions commodities analyst Nick
Trickett.
(Additional reporting by Praveen Menon in Sydney and Helen Reid in
Johannesburg; Editing by Marguerita Choy)
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