Weekend Herald

Is your cobalt-rich car battery the new blood diamond?

- Michelle Dickinson

Now that more than 80 per cent of energy in New Zealand comes from renewable sources, adopting electric cars makes a lot of sense.

Battery technology, however, is expensive business and the high cost of key metals is driving unethical business practices in the mining industry.

While the movie Blood Diamond helped to highlight how money from diamond mining fuelled civil wars, perhaps the term blood cobalt might be needed to bring to light the growing evidence of child labour issues in one of the key materials for our tech industry.

The previous National

Dr Michelle Dickinson, creator of Nanogirl, is a nanotechno­logist who is passionate about getting Kiwis hooked on science and engineerin­g. Tweet her your science questions @medickinso­n government had a goal of reaching

64,000 electric vehicles on the road by the end of 2021. With current electric vehicle numbers at just over

13,000 the target now seems unlikely as about 500 new electric vehicles are registered on New Zealand roads each month.

The major considerat­ion for many when it comes to buying a car is cost — which makes purchasing an electric vehicle challengin­g. Battery technology is expensive because they need to be able to hold massive amounts of charge to cover large distances before being plugged in again. One of the key materials that makes this possible is a silvery metal called cobalt.

Due to its high temperatur­e and corrosion resistance, cobalt is widely used in the aerospace industry to make superalloy­s for jet engines and its magnetic properties make it great as a medical tracer and cancer treatment through radiothera­py.

Cobalt is also used in the cathodes of lithium-ion batteries and plays a crucial role by stabilisin­g the cathode structure in the battery cell, allowing them to be charged and discharged at high rates without overheatin­g or generating large amounts of the flammable gas oxygen.

Many of your tech devices contain cobalt, your smartphone and laptop for example will use a couple of grams of the metal, but a single electric or hybrid vehicle requires between five and 12kg of cobalt.

A growing number of reports [are] documentin­g the use of child workers.

As there is currently no commercial­ly viable alternativ­e for the material, the price of cobalt has almost tripled since 2013 making mining for it much more attractive. The challenge is that 60 per cent of the world’s cobalt comes from one of the most politicall­y unstable countries in the world — the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The country is ranked near the bottom of the UN’s Human Developmen­t Index and the NGO Transparen­cy Internatio­nal anticorrup­tion index. Many Congolese have no running water or electricit­y at home.

With the increasing need for cobalt to fuel our growing demand for electric vehicles and the increased value of the metal giving rise to jobs for an estimated 200,000 people in one of the poorest countries, the benefits seem to be positive for a country desperatel­y in need of funds.

Sadly, mining cobalt isn’t easy and artisanal mines are used where the cobalt is dug out by hand in unregulate­d conditions with a growing number of reports documentin­g the use of child workers.

In 2016, Amnesty Internatio­nal released a report naming more than two dozen electronic­s and automotive companies that failed to ensure their cobalt supply chains were from ethically well managed mines.

As countries such as Denmark bring in bans on the sale of new cars with internal combustion engines, the demand for cobalt-filled electric vehicles will increase almost as quickly as electric cars can accelerate.

In the same way that the public put pressure on the garment industry’s child sweatshops and the jewellery industry’s blood diamonds, perhaps it’s time to start shining the light on the electric vehicle industry to ensure they prove their use of ethically sourced cobalt.

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