Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Chinese metal firms hopeful on new rule

- ANNIE LEE AND MARTIN RITCHIE Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Winnie Zhu of Bloomberg News.

Chinese firms producing and processing battery materials see new U.S. rules aimed at limiting Beijing’s grip on the electric-vehicle industry as less stringent than feared, allowing them to preserve a key role in the global supply chain.

Washington’s move, which seeks to cut China out of U.S. tax credits and curb the country’s control over joint ventures, created uncertaint­y earlier this month, with questions swirling around the status of Chinese-owned battery-material operations outside the mainland, and over the impact on the wider car and battery industry.

Ford Motor Co. was among the automakers that said its ability to benefit from federal tax credits could be affected, potentiall­y hurting the government’s ability to ultimately boost EV sales.

China dominates global metal processing and its domestic industry and stateowned entities will be cut out under the regulation. But significan­t projects in places like Indonesia and Australia, key for nickel and lithium extraction, are privately held — and so, under current guidance, should not qualify as “foreign entities of concern,” or FEOC.

“The U.S. wants their own supply chain and to get rid of China,” said Dani Widjaja, Jakarta-based vice president at Chinese company CNGR Advanced Material Co., which produces nickel in Indonesia. “But they also realize they cannot proceed with the electrific­ation of automobile industry if they are not flexible in terms of including the Chinese.”

“Right now for the critical minerals like graphite, lithium, nickel and cobalt, they are dominated by the Chinese. The announceme­nt from last week was kind of a compromise,” he said, adding he was speaking in a personal capacity.

Others welcomed a path for China to continue to participat­e in the market.

Still, company officials — who asked not to be named as the discussion­s are not public — said teams were still studying the regulation­s. Washington retains significan­t room for interpreta­tion, especially in cases where there are ties to senior political figures or institutio­ns, and a U.S. presidenti­al election looms next year, potentiall­y bringing further upheaval.

Rules for battery components should apply from 2024, while critical minerals will be covered from 2025.

“It is worth noting that the definition of the government of a covered country not only includes a government or a ruling party, but also senior foreign political officials and the immediate family members of senior officials,” said Susan Zou, an analyst at Rystad Energy, pointing out that individual shareholde­rs of significan­t private companies in China are current members of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, a political advisory body.

“The ambiguity is a double-edged sword.”

Daiwa Capital Markets analysts also urged caution. Under Daiwa’s interpreta­tion, the Chinese’ overseas projects they cover are not FEOCs — but could be given links to senior political figures.

“Our interpreta­tions yield non-FEOC results for all of our coverage, but the ‘spirit of the law’ is subject to changes/modificati­ons by the U.S.,” they said in a note.

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