San Antonio Express-News

U.S. launches $3.1B plan for EV batteries

- By Matthew Daly

WASHINGTON — Continuing its push to dramatical­ly boost sales of electric vehicles, the Biden administra­tion on Monday announced $3.1 billion in funding to U.S. companies that make and recycle lithiumion batteries.

The investment­s from last year’s $1 trillion infrastruc­ture law are separate from an executive order President Joe Biden issued this spring, invoking the Defense Production Act boost production of lithium and other critical minerals used to power electric vehicles.

Energy Secretary Jennifer Granholm said the new program will offer grants to companies that process or recycle battery components to increase domestic supplies of a market now dominated by China and other countries. The grants will help strengthen U.S. energy independen­ce and support Biden’s goal to have electric vehicles make up half of all vehicles sales in America by 2030, she said.

Electric vehicles accounted for 4.2 percent of U.S. new vehicle sales in the first quarter of this year, according to Edmunds.com.

“Positionin­g the United States front and center in meeting the growing demand for advanced batteries is how we boost our competitiv­eness and electrify our transporta­tion system,” Granholm said in a statement.

Granholm, a former Michigan governor, announced the battery initiative during a visit to her home state to highlight

clean-energy provisions in the bipartisan infrastruc­ture law Biden signed in November.

The grant program “will give our domestic supply chain the jolt it needs to become more secure and less reliant on other nations,” while creating good-paying jobs and reducing planetwarm­ing greenhouse gas emissions, she said.

“We need a lot of batteries. And we want American workers making those batteries right here in America,” added Gina Mccarthy, Biden’s climate adviser, at a separate briefing Monday at the White House.

The $3 billion will be allocated

as grants to as many as 30 companies, officials said, and represents nearly half of $7 billion approved under the infrastruc­ture law to improve the domestic battery supply chain.

Companies will be required to match grants on a 50-50 basis, with a minimum $50 million investment, the Energy Department said. The money will go to companies that can create new, retrofitte­d or expanded processing facilities as well as battery recycling programs, the department said.

The focus on battery processing and recycling is part of a broader effort by Biden to shift

the country away from gas-powered cars to electric vehicles and combat climate change.

A March 31 executive order intended to increase mining of lithium and other critical minerals does not waive or suspend existing environmen­tal and labor standards, the White House said. Nor does it address the chief hurdle to increased domestic mining: the years-long process needed to obtain a federal permit for a new mine.

Even so, the mining industry and supporters in Congress cheered Biden’s use of the Defense Production Act.

Rich Nolan, president and

CEO of the National Mining Associatio­n, called it a historic step by the White House to “recognize the critical importance of minerals and push to electrify the car industry.”

But unless the administra­tion also moves to speed approvals of new hardrock mines, “we risk feeding the minerals dominance of geopolitic­al rivals” such as China and Russia, Nolan said.

As of March 31, more than 2.5 million plug-in electric vehicles have been sold in America, with more than 800,000 of those having been sold since Biden took office, the Energy Department said. Battery costs have fallen more than 90 percent since 2008, while performanc­e has increased.

“The future of mobility is electric,” said Sen. Gary Peters, D-mich., who appeared with Granholm at an event in Lansing, Mich. The energy grants “could help to ensure Michigan remains on the forefront of innovation by shoring up our supply chains for advanced battery technologi­es necessary to deploy the next all-electric fleet,” he said.

“The United States is finally getting into the global battery race and broader race for the future,” said Abigail Wulf, vice president of critical minerals strategy at Securing America’s Future Energy, an advocacy group that promotes domestic energy production.

“It’s now up to DOE to get the money out the door to projects that will make us stronger in the short- and long-term,” she said, and “help make sure the United States isn’t just playing catchup, but leading.”

 ?? Justin Sullivan / Tribune News Service ?? A Tesla car recharges its battery in Petaluma, Calif. Electric vehicles accounted for 4.2 percent of U.S. new vehicle sales in the first quarter of this year.
Justin Sullivan / Tribune News Service A Tesla car recharges its battery in Petaluma, Calif. Electric vehicles accounted for 4.2 percent of U.S. new vehicle sales in the first quarter of this year.

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