The funding comes as the US battles to secure self-sufficient supply of the minerals critical to producing batteries for electric vehicles and other products needed for the energy transition. China has long been the dominant supplier or processor in the global race for many of these commodities, causing the Biden administration to bolster the US position with legislation that includes billions of dollars in grants and tax incentives for suppliers.
President Joe Biden in early 2022 invoked Cold War-era powers of the 1950 Defense Production Act to boost domestic production of battery materials, helping give mining companies access to $750 million under the Title III fund. The latest funding follows other Defense Department announcements, including a $37.5 million grant to Graphite One Inc. announced in July to help the startup develop North America’s largest deposit of the material.
Albemarle envisions reopening the Kings Mountain mine with an initial annual capacity of 50,000 metric tons in 2027. The Charlotte, North Carolina-based company operates the only active lithium mine in the US, at Silver Peak, Nevada.
Tamarack, a joint venture between Talon and Rio Tinto Group, isn’t in commercial production yet, but Tesla Inc. already agreed to purchase 75,000 tons of nickel concentrates from the Minnesota project. The mine will also produce copper and cobalt.
The US government’s road to securing a fully domestic supply chain of critical materials could be long. China’s head start makes it the go-to producer for everything from rare-earth elements to lithium-ion batteries. Critics say these grants and loans by the US government pale in comparison to the amounts needed to compete with the behemoth.
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