• Electric Vehicles May Cede U.S. Power to China Which Controls 70% of th

    From Paul Ragna@21:1/5 to All on Sat Sep 16 15:34:39 2023
    XPost: talk.politics.guns, alt.politics, alt.fan.rush-limbaugh

    Ya think?
    China Joe Biden has to do something to earn the millions of dollars he
    has received from China.

    "Electric Vehicles May Cede U.S. Power to China Which Controls 70% of the World’s Lithium"

    <https://www.breitbart.com/politics/2023/09/15/owning-the-future- electric-vehicles-may-cede-u-s-power-to-china-which-controls-70-of-the- worlds-lithium/>

    "President Joe Biden’s commitment to his green energy agenda, with
    Electric Vehicles (EVs) at the forefront, without first securing an
    American supply chain is likely to cede United States economic power to
    its biggest adversary, China.

    The United Auto Workers (UAW) are now striking against the top three automakers, General Motors (GM), Ford, and Stellantis. The union has continuously asked for a contract that ensures security for auto workers
    amid Biden’s EV push which, if not coupled with an ambitious
    manufacturing agenda, may eliminate millions of U.S. jobs.

    China would be the largest beneficiary of such failures by the Biden administration. Aside from producing a majority of the world’s EVs, China
    also controls key components of the EV battery supply chain.

    Through the mineral refining process necessary to build EV batteries,
    China controls nearly 70 percent of the world’s lithium, 95 percent of manganese, 73 percent of cobalt, 70 percent of graphite, and 63 percent
    of nickel.

    Compare China’s control over mineral refining to the U.S., which has
    barely any domestic capacity to process minerals today despite Biden’s insistence that the American economy and consumers are prepared for EVs.

    China also controls the parts needed to go into an EV battery."

    "About 77 percent of cathodes are made in China, along with 74 percent of separators, 82 percent of electrolytes, 92 percent of anodes, 73 percent
    of NMC cathodes, and 99 percent of LFP cathodes.

    The U.S., on the other hand, makes just one percent of the world’s NMC
    cathodes that are used for EV batteries."

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)