Houston Chronicle

Election could stir up electric-car industry

Biden to speed up adoption; Trump to keep status quo

- By Esha Dey

Both of the major-party presidenti­al candidates have said they support electric vehicles, but a Joe Biden win could bring changes to significan­tly speed up the adoption of cars and trucks built by the likes of Tesla Inc. and Nikola Corp.

Most transporta­tion experts envision a future with road travel dominated by electric-powered autos. The outcome of the election could determine whether it takes a decade to get there, or much longer.

Biden’s plan for the industry includes building more than a half-million charging stations by 2030, restoring the full electricve­hicle tax credit and institutin­g stricter regulation­s that would encourage the use of electricpo­wered autos. President Donald Trump is expected to maintain the status quo — which has included loosening fuel emission standards and a plan for building a smaller number of charging facilities.

“A Biden win, coupled with Democrats taking control of the Senate, has the potential to shift the trajectory of electric vehicle adoption for years while reversing some of the damage inflicted by the current administra­tion,” a team of Bloomberg New Energy Finance analysts, led by Aleksandra O’Donovan, said in a report published last week.

The most crucial difference between the candidates with respect to the electric-vehicle industry is their position on fueleconom­y standards. The Trump administra­tion eased Obama-era targets and offers little support for electric vehicles, calling for 5 percent of U.S. auto sales to be electric in any year from 2022 to 2026, according to BloombergN­EF. Under Biden’s proposed, more stringent rules, the EV share of passenger vehicle sales would have to hit at least 25 percent by 2026, with electric-car sales reaching 4 million per year.

“It may be that electric vehicles are the future, but the pace at which that happens could change a lot,” JMP Securities analyst Joseph Osha said in an interview. There is also “much more ambitious language” from Biden’s campaign about encouragin­g specific things such as EV supply chain, de-carbonizat­ion and long-haul power lines, Osha said.

Palo Alto, Calif.-based Tesla, being the front-runner in the EV race, will be an obvious beneficiar­y of any big policy changes in the sector that drive faster adoption of electric cars. However, startups including Nikola, Workhorse Group Inc., Lordstown Motors Corp. and China’s Nio Inc., which have already seen their U.S.-traded shares soar in recent months, also have a lot to gain.

Suppliers to these companies, a much more streamline­d group compared to the traditiona­l automakers, could also reap the benefits of a Biden presidency. Battery makers such as LG Chem Ltd., Panasonic Corp. and Contempora­ry Amperex Technology Co., as well as battery metal companies Albemarle Corp., Livent Corp., Lithium Americas Corp., Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile SA and Tianqi Lithium Corp., could get a big bump from a Democratic win. In fact, earlier this month the Biden campaign privately told U.S. miners it would support boosting domestic output of metals used to make electric vehicles and solar panels, according to a Reuters report.

Lithium and battery stocks have significan­tly underperfo­rmed the car companies’ shares this year, suggesting they hold the potential for greater gains for investors once any decisive policy is announced.

 ?? Elijah Nouvelage / Bloomberg ?? Experts say a Joe Biden win in the 2020 presidenti­al election would benefit electric vehicle firms including Tesla, Nikola and SK Battery America, whose Commerce, Ga., facility is shown above.
Elijah Nouvelage / Bloomberg Experts say a Joe Biden win in the 2020 presidenti­al election would benefit electric vehicle firms including Tesla, Nikola and SK Battery America, whose Commerce, Ga., facility is shown above.

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