Men's Journal

THE POLITICS

CAN AMERICAN “DIPLOMACY” SWING A TOTAL AUTO OVERHAUL?

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WITH THE CURRENT

STATE of paralysis in Washington, D.C., and a partisan gap wider than ever, it seems like a big ask to pass the legislatio­n that’s needed to usher in the electric future. But you might be surprised to learn that Democrats and Republican­s haven’t sounded quite so far apart on EVS lately. For one, EVS have gone from being an ecological issue to one of national security.

“We’re behind the rest of the world in a major way when it comes to EVS, and the U.S. doesn’t like to be behind on key technologi­es—so there is some consensus growing, and both sides are recognizin­g that we’re not the leaders right now on this,” says

Dr. John Paul Helveston, an assistant professor of engineerin­g management at George Washington

University. The main concern: China currently controls 75 percent of the battery manufactur­ing capacity, along with nearly 100 percent of the material refining that goes into those batteries. “It presents a deep vulnerabil­ity for the U.S.,” says Helveston, who adds that the situation could be seen as comparable to the oil crisis of the 1970s, which revealed the U.S.’S over-reliance on access to oil in the Middle East.

Other forces are at work, too. As a New York Times op-ed noted last year, some once-wary Republican­s like Senators Marsha Blackburn of Tennessee and Mitch Mcconnell of Kentucky have warmed to electrics once related jobs arrived in their states—in both cases, Ford EV plants. New alliances are developing. Labor and climate groups have united, somewhat surprising­ly. Old alliances between automakers and oil companies have weakened in favor of groups like Zero Emission Transporta­tion Associatio­n (ZETA), which lobbies for automakers, battery manufactur­ers and charging infrastruc­ture providers.

This is not to say that pols of both stripes will roll out the red carpet for EV subsidies. President Biden’s Build Back Better legislatio­n holds $320 billion in clean energy funding, including EV tax credits; however, it appears to be stalled out, possibly for good. Without sweeping action, the U.S. is unlikely to catch up with the rapid scale of EV adoption that’s taken place both in

Europe and

China.

“BOTH SIDES RECOGNIZE WE’RE NOT THE LEADERS RIGHT NOW...AND ARE DEEPLY VULNERABLE.”

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