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TESLA INKS DEAL TO GET KEY BATTERY COMPONENT OUTSIDE CHINA

Tesla is turning to Mozambique for a key component in its electric car batteries
in what analysts believe is a first-of-its-kind deal designed to reduce its
dependence on China for graphite

By TOM BOWKER and TOM KRISHER Associated Press
16 January 2022, 12:52
• 4 min read
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2:55


On Location: April 14, 2022

Catch up on the developing stories making headlines.
The Associated Press

LONDON -- Tesla is turning to Mozambique for a key component in its electric car
batteries in what analysts believe is a first-of-its-kind deal designed to
reduce its dependence on China for graphite.

Elon Musk's company signed an agreement last month with Australia's Syrah
Resources, which operates one of the world’s largest graphite mines in the
southern African country. It's a unique partnership between an electric vehicle
manufacturer and a producer of the mineral that is critical for lithium-ion
batteries. The value of the deal hasn't been released.



Tesla will buy the material from the company's processing plant in Vidalia,
Louisiana, which sources graphite from its mine in Balama, Mozambique. The
Austin, Texas-based electric automaker plans to buy up 80% of what the plant
produces — 8,000 tons of graphite per year — starting in 2025, according to the
agreement. Syrah must prove the material meets Tesla’s standards.

The deal is part of Tesla's plan to ramp up its capacity to make its own
batteries so it can reduce its dependence on China, which dominates global
graphite markets, said Simon Moores of United Kingdom-based battery materials
data and intelligence provider, Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.

“It starts at the top with geopolitics,” Moores said. “The U.S. wants to build
enough capacity domestically to be able to build (lithium-ion batteries) within
the USA. And this deal will permit Tesla to source graphite independent from
China.”

Moores said producing the batteries in the U.S. will reduce some of the
questions Tesla is facing about its ties to China, where there are environmental
concerns at some mines. The automaker also has set up a showroom in the region
of Xinjiang, where Chinese officials are accused of forced labor and other human
rights abuses against mostly Muslim ethnic minorities.

A message was left seeking comment from Tesla, which has disbanded its media
relations department.

The battery industry has been confronted with a short supply of graphite in
recent months, Moores said. Graphite stores lithium inside a battery until it’s
needed to generate electricity by splitting into charged ions and electrons.



It comes as every major automaker is racing to get into electric vehicles amid
concerns about climate change.

Tesla is making almost a million electric cars per year, and sourcing enough
batteries is its biggest constraint, he said.

“They’ve upped their own battery manufacturing capacity,” Moores said, but still
“they can’t get enough batteries.”

A new battery factory that the company is building in its new hometown of
Austin, Texas, will allow it to get closer to self-sufficiency, but Moores said
it is still buying batteries from other manufacturers, “and that won’t change
this decade.”

For instance, Tesla has a deal with Panasonic to make battery cells at the
automaker's battery factory near Reno, Nevada.

The deal with Syrah is part of a broader effort by automakers to secure
relatively scarce raw materials for batteries as demand for electric vehicles is
expected to grow, said Sam Abuelsamid, principal e-mobility analyst for
Guidehouse Insights.

The deal also brings the graphite processed in Louisiana much closer to Tesla's
U.S. factories.

“The pandemic pointed out to us that we've got these long, long, long supply
chains, and it doesn’t take much to disrupt a supply chain,” said Donald
Sadoway, a professor of materials chemistry at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology. “Somebody could all of the sudden say, ‘We’re going to jack up the
prices,' or ‘We’re going to refuse to ship it.'"

It's unlikely that the Tesla deal with Syrah will rankle the Chinese government
because China has plenty of markets for its graphite, including increased
domestic electric vehicle production, Abuelsamid said.

China, though, is Tesla's biggest global market. It has a giant factory near
Shanghai and sells about 450,000 vehicles per year there, compared with about
350,000 in the U.S., Abuelsamid said.

For the Australian mining firm, the deal is “crucial” because it has a
non-Chinese purchaser for its graphite product, Moores said.

Syrah’s graphite mine in Mozambique’s northernmost province, Cabo Delgado, is
one of the world’s largest, with an ability to produce 350,000 tons of flake
graphite a year.

Cabo Delgado has faced violence in recent years by Islamic extremists, an
insurgency that has recently extended inland from coastal areas toward the
neighboring Niassa province.

The mine is on the main road connecting the Cabo Delgado and Niassa provinces, a
thoroughfare that has been recently upgraded by a Chinese contractor. At a
ceremony to reopen the road in December, President Filipe Nyusi called for
vigilance so the road isn't used by insurgents. ———

Tom Krisher reported from Detroit.

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