Graphite in EV batteries creates conundrum under US climate bill

Electric vehicle. (Reference image in the public domain from Pxfuel).

Graphite is a key part of today’s electric vehicle batteries. It’s also tricky for Americans eyeing a tax break for buying climate-friendly cars.

EVs can qualify for a $7,500 tax credit under President Joe Biden’s climate and tax bill, as long as their batteries contain minerals extracted from or processed in a country with a free trade agreement with the US, and providing part of the components are made or assembled in North America. The measure, under the Inflation Reduction Act, kicks in next year, and content requirements get stricter after 2024.

Graphite, which is mostly produced in China, may cause issues.

“The material that concerns me most is the anode,” UBS AG analyst Tim Bush said Tuesday in a webinar on EV battery chemistries.

Graphite is an essential ingredient in EV battery anodes, a terminal inside a rechargeable cell. Battery makers can either use natural graphite extracted from mines to make anodes or a synthetic material that’s typically more expensive but lasts longer, charges faster and improves safety. China is a big source of the raw material and also accounts for about 60% of natural graphite production capacity and 90% of the synthetic variety.

While automakers and battery manufacturers are spending billions of dollars on new North American factories, “we have not seen that for the anode,” Bush said. Making anodes is energy intensive, it produces a lot of emissions and the future of the technology is uncertain, making it “very challenging” to work around such content requirements, according to Bush.

“On the current technology roadmap, it’s slated for potential obsolescence,” he said.

The industry is researching using lithium metal to replace graphite anodes in solid-state batteries and tapping silicon as a substitute, something Tesla Inc.’s Elon Musk talked about in the past. Until then, graphite’s presence in EV batteries will remain a challenge for US consumers looking for that tax incentive.

(By Yvonne Yue Li)

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