Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Biden’s EV dreams means more mining in America

- Rich Nolan is President and CEO of the National Mining Associatio­n.

The Biden administra­tion has just supercharg­ed the electric vehicle (EV) revolution. With its finalized tailpipe emissions rule, the administra­tion expects that by 2032 70% of new U.S. car sales will be electric.

This lightning-fast transforma­tion of the nation’s car fleet faces myriad challenges but perhaps none are greater than sourcing the minerals needed for millions of EVs and addressing the nation’s alarming reliance on Chinese-controlled mineral supply chains.

We need the minerals

While the pivot to EVs may be the bellwether of the President’s economic and jobs agenda, the foundation from which he hopes to build our EV future needs desperate attention. The mineral supply chains needed to provide the irreplacea­ble materials for a homegrown EV industry all but don’t exist and there’s little progress to show in developing them.

Our minerals vulnerabil­ity is already a source of stunning economic and geopolitic­al leverage for our rivals. Of the 50 critical mineral commoditie­s the U.S. Geological Survey lists as essential for U.S. economic and national security, China is the top producer or top supplier for 30. And with EV demand now set to soar, our deeply troubling overrelian­ce on mineral imports and Chinese supply chains will deepen. Beijing is working to ensure it happens.

Just this week China initiated dispute settlement proceeding­s against the U.S. at the World Trade Organizati­on to fight the Biden administra­tion’s EV polices.

Unfortunat­ely, the administra­tion is proving more than capable of getting in its own way. Mining policy missteps are either directly contributi­ng to our supply chain challenges or have hamstrung industry’s ability to combat them. With the stakes greater than ever, the administra­tion needs a mining policy reset and time is of the essence.

We have the miners

I believe the nation’s 383,000 hardrock miners can provide the answers we need, but only if given the opportunit­y to do so. Glaringly missing from the President’s call for a return to Made-in-America is an embrace of Mined-in-America.

Despite some notable steps to reshore mineral processing and to work with allied nations to bolster supply chain cooperatio­n, the administra­tion has in fact placed new obstacles in the way of a domestic mining renaissanc­e when it should be doing just the opposite.

Along with land withdrawal­s and blocked mines, the Biden administra­tion’s Interagenc­y Working Group on mining — tasked with finding solutions to America’s minerals challenge — recommende­d upending the nation’s foundation­al mining law, overhaulin­g how the nation governs mining, and imposing potentiall­y an 8% royalty on miners along with a dirt tax that would cost hundreds of millions of dollars a year. The authors also, stunningly, rejected the need to accelerate mine permitting despite abundant evidence otherwise.

The report was so counterpro­ductive it seemed the recommenda­tions had been authored in Beijing—a blueprint to ensure China keeps a strangleho­ld on our mineral security.

We need more mines

Fortunatel­y, bipartisan leaders in Congress have stepped up to oppose the most egregious of those proposals. But while peer nations, like Canada, are embracing a whole-of-government approach to spur new mining and accelerate the developmen­t of secure, reliable supply chains, it’s hard not to feel we’re instead moving in reverse.

It’s past time the Biden administra­tion embraces American mining and our world-leading mining workforce. The mining industry can build the critical supply chains we need and provide a foundation for the pivot to our EV future. We have the resources – from lithium and nickel to copper and rare earths – to slash our reliance on foreign sources but it won’t happen if we’re forced to fight policy rather than benefit from it.

 ?? Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette ?? Remnants of coal mining and coal waste disposal mark the landscape at the former Robena undergroun­d mine in Monongahel­a Township.
Andrew Rush/Post-Gazette Remnants of coal mining and coal waste disposal mark the landscape at the former Robena undergroun­d mine in Monongahel­a Township.

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