Seeking to counter China, US awards $3 billion for EV battery production
in 14 states
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[September 20, 2024] By
MATTHEW DALY
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration is awarding over $3 billion
to U.S. companies to boost domestic production of advanced batteries and
other materials used for electric vehicles, part of a continuing push to
reduce China’s global dominance in battery production for EVs and other
electronics.
The grants will fund a total of 25 projects in 14 states, including
battleground states such as Michigan and North Carolina, as well as
Ohio, Texas, South Carolina and Louisiana.
The grants announced Friday mark the second round of EV battery funding
under the bipartisan infrastructure law approved in 2021. An earlier
round allocated $1.8 billion for 14 projects that are ongoing. The
totals are down from amounts officials announced in October 2022 and
reflect a number of projects that were withdrawn or rejected by U.S.
officials during sometimes lengthy negotiations.
The money is part of a larger effort by President Joe Biden and Vice
President Kamala Harris to boost production and sales of electric
vehicles as a key element of their strategy to slow climate change and
build up U.S. manufacturing. Companies receiving awards process lithium,
graphite or other battery materials, or manufacture components used in
EV batteries.
“Today’s awards move us closer to achieving the administration’s goal of
building an end-to-end supply chain for batteries and critical minerals
here in America, from mining to processing to manufacturing and
recycling, which is vital to reduce China’s dominance of this critical
sector,'' White House economic adviser Lael Brainard said.
The Biden-Harris administration is "committed to making batteries in the
United States that are going to be vital for powering our grid, our
homes and businesses and America’s iconic auto industry,'' Brainard told
reporters Thursday during a White House call.
The awards announced Friday bring to nearly $35 billion total U.S.
investments to bolster domestic critical minerals and battery supply
chains, Brainard said, citing projects from major lithium mines in
Nevada and North Carolina to battery factories in Michigan and Ohio to
production of rare earth elements and magnets in California and Texas.
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A 2023 Ford Mustang Mach-E charges, Friday, March 8, 2024, at an
electric vehicle charging station in London, Ohio. (AP Photo/Joshua
A. Bickel, File)
“We’re using every tool at our
disposal, from grants and loans to allocated tax credits,'' she
said, adding that the administration's approach has leveraged more
$100 billion in private sector investment since Biden took office.
In recent years, China has cornered the market for processing and
refining key minerals such as lithium, rare earth elements and
gallium, and also has dominated battery production, leaving the U.S.
and its allies and partners "vulnerable,'' Brainard said.
The U.S. has responded by taking what she called “tough, targeted
measures to enforce against unfair actions by China.” Just last
week, officials finalized higher tariffs on Chinese imports of
critical minerals such as graphite used in EV and grid-storage
batteries. The administration also has acted under the 2022 climate
law to incentivize domestic sourcing for EVs sold in the U.S. and
placed restrictions on products from China and other adversaries
labeled by the U.S. as foreign entities of concern.
"We're committed to making batteries in the United States of
America,'' Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said.
If finalized, awards announced Friday will support 25 projects with
8,000 construction jobs and over 4,000 permanent jobs, officials
said. Companies will be required to match grants on a 50-50 basis,
with a minimum $50 million investment, the Energy Department said.
While federal funding may not be make-or-break for some projects,
the infusion of cash from the infrastructure and climate laws has
dramatically transformed the U.S. battery manufacturing sector in
the past few years, said Matthew McDowell, associate professor of
engineering at Georgia Institute of Technology.
McDowell said he is excited about the next generation of batteries
for clean energy storage, including solid state batteries, which
could potentially hold more energy than lithium ion.
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