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how China has monopolized the electric vehicle industry

Business

Think of an electric car and the first name that comes to mind will probably be Tesla. The California company makes the world’s bestselling electric car and was recently valued at $1tn. But behind this US success story is a tale of China’s manufacturing might.

Tesla’s factory in Shanghai now produces more cars than its plant in California. Some of the batteries that drive them are Chinese-made and the minerals that power the batteries are largely refined and mined by Chinese companies.

As the world transitions to electric vehicles (EVs), companies are racing to secure and strengthen their positions in the battery supply chain, from mineral extraction and processing to battery and EV manufacturing.

The sector has seen a move towards vertical integration – where one company controls a number of steps along the supply chain – to guarantee supply and, in some cases, to improve transparency.

And in what has been dubbed, the “battery arms race”, China is in pole position.

China is the world’s biggest market for EVs with total sales of 1.3m vehicles last year, more than 40% of sales worldwide. Chinese battery-maker CATL controls about 30% of the world’s EV battery market. And cobalt specialist suppliers Darton Commodities estimate that Chinese refineries supplied 85% of the world’s battery-ready cobalt last year; a mineral that helps to improve the stability of lithium-ion batteries.

Most of that cobalt comes from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where almost 70% of the mining sector is dominated by Chinese companies.

Drive through DRC’s southern copper and cobalt mining belt, and signs in Chinese are everywhere: at the entrance to casinos and hotels and on trucks and business premises.

In August, China Molybdenum Company (CMOC), a giant Chinese mining firm, announced an investment of $2.5bn (£1.8bn) to double copper and cobalt production at its Tenke Fungurume Mine, already one of the largest in DRC. That followed its purchase of a 95% stake in nearby Kisanfu copper and cobalt mine for $550m.

Fellow Chinese corporate giant, Huayou Cobalt owns or has a stake in at least three copper-cobalt mines in DRC and is a key player at every step of the cobalt supply chain, from mines to refineries to battery precursor and cathode production.

But China’s dominance of DRC’s copper-cobalt mines comes at a price, according to claims by Congolese workers employed at them.

“The Chinese treat Congolese very badly. They like to insult us. They like to raise their voices. Even for a small fault, you’re punished. The Chinese are there as the boss to control Congolese,” says a worker employed at Sicomines, a mine majority-owned by a Chinese consortium, which includes Huayou Cobalt.

Tesla’s Shanghai super factory now produces more cars than its California plant.
Tesla’s Shanghai super factory now produces more cars than its California plant. Photograph: Barcroft Media/Getty Images

Workers at Sicomines claim they are paid less than Chinese workers who do the same jobs, and are subjected to degrading treatment by Chinese supervisors.

“It’s the same as during the colonial times but now we’re under the Chinese,” says another worker.

Yet Amnesty International, which has conducted investigations into human rights abuses in the informal mining sector in the DRC, says the nationality of the companies dominating the EV market is not their primary concern.

“The issue is that many of the Chinese mining companies are refusing to be transparent about their operations, but the human rights issues related to cobalt mining in the DRC did not arrive with the Chinese: the DRC has a long history of foreign players coming to the country and exploiting their resources with little accountability,” says Mark Dummett, programme director at Amnesty International.

“Amnesty is extremely concerned about the impact that mining for electric car batteries is going to have on communities around the world; it has the potential to be devastating if the brands at the top don’t use their leverage to demand that these new global supply chains are set up in a way that respect human and environmental rights.”

Chinese mining companies point to the contributions they make to DRC’s revenues and local communities, while working in a challenging environment.

One Chinese manager says, “It’s very frustrating to work with the Congolese government. It’s the most corrupt country.”

Analyst Christian-Geraud Neema Byamungu, says labour laws are not always respected and corruption is widespread in the country as a whole, which potentially could create an environment in which companies are not inclined to follow the rules.

Some car and battery manufacturers are beginning to reduce the amount of cobalt in their batteries, partly as a way to avoid the legal and reputational risks associated with cobalt from DRC. Nickel-rich batteries are seen as one way forward, but the same Chinese companies that dominate cobalt mining in DRC – Huayou Cobalt and CMOC – are also increasing investment in nickel extraction and processing in Indonesia, which has the world’s largest nickel reserves at 72m tonnes. This means China is now the largest global market producer of nickel, beating off competition from Europe and the US.

“China will be the major player because they connected with the market in the country – but also export the nickel material at a lower price compared to Europe, as Chinese companies are known for cheap labour,” says Pius Ginting, executive director of Action for Ecology and People’s Emancipation (AEER), an Indonesian environmental NGO.

Recently there have been efforts to push back against China’s dominance, starting in DRC.

On a visit to Kolwezi in May, a city in the heart of DRC’s copper-cobalt belt, the country’s president, Félix Tshisekedi, said: “People come to Congo empty handed and when they leave they are billionaires, but we remain poor.”

DRC recently announced a review of some of its biggest mining contracts, including the $6.2bn deal which gave the Chinese consortium majority control over Sicomines in 2007.

The Chinese presence is everywhere in Kolwezi, from casinos to hotels, to road expansion projects and mines.
The Chinese presence is everywhere in Kolwezi, from casinos to hotels, to road expansion projects and mines. Photograph: Pete Pattisson

In Europe too, companies are beginning to gain on China’s lead. By the end of the decade, the continent is expected to have 28 factories producing lithium-ion cells, with production capacity due to increase by 1440% from 2020 levels, according to Darton Commodities. That growth is being driven by companies such as Britishvolt in Northumberland and Sweden’s Northvolt, as well as Asian firms expanding production into Europe.

However, European investment in mining and the production of battery precursor and cathode materials is not keeping pace, says Andries Gerbens at Darton. “China will eventually become less dominant. Nonetheless, it will remain a big player,” he says.

The US, however, lags behind, despite a $174bn investment “to win the EV market”, announced as part of President Joe Biden’s $2tn infrastructure package in April, although this has since been slimmed down.

Simon Moores, CEO of Benchmark Mineral Intelligence told a US Senate committee in June that China is building the equivalent of one battery megafactory a week compared with one every four months in the US.

He warned: “A new global lithium-ion economy is being created, yet any ambitions for the United States to be a leader … continue to only creep forward and be outstripped by China and Europe.”

A spokesperson for CMOC in DRC says, “We are devoted to providing a safe, healthy, and decent work environment to all employees and attach great importance to protecting the rights of employees.” The spokesperson says the company is committed to observing international labour conventions and local labour laws, adding that all DRC national employees are members of trade unions.

Sicomines itself did not respond to multiple requests for comment. However, in a statement Huayou Cobalt says, “Sicomines, as a responsible company, strictly abides by DRC laws and regulations and respects human rights and fulfils best labour practice.”

the guardian



4 Comments on "how China has monopolized the electric vehicle industry"

  1. Theedrich on Mon, 6th Dec 2021 4:31 am 

    China cannot best the U.S. in traditional terms. The U.S. is too powerful and flexible in many ways.  Thus, China has decided to defeat America from within.  It is developing highly advanced hypersonic, globe-circling missiles to wipe out the U.S. without warning.  It is making and exporting fentanyl through Latino avenues to the United States in order to weaken the populace’s youth and moral stability.  In synchrony with Klaus Schwab’s World Economic Forum (Davos elites, Georg Sörös), it is encouraging the corruption of the entire American political system through massive bribery and kleptocracy.  It is also getting the Democrat Party to change the demography of America through massive immigration which will rot the U.S. out from the inside.  The current lunge for totalitarian power by the Washington elites will automatically destroy the nation from within.  The elites will have their dictatorship, but the country will collapse, and China will reap the benefit therefrom.  Finally, the COVID-19 was engineered in China.  Despite denials from everywhere, that virus may in fact be a technique of biological warfare against the West.  In any case, the virus has caused lethal economic and social damage to the traditional structure of the U.S.

    And the leaders of the U.S. want the White race to go extinct.

    So accept death, Whitey.

  2. Biden's hairplug on Mon, 6th Dec 2021 5:08 am 

    “China cannot beat the U.S. in traditional terms.”

    The US could not beat the USSR either, the USSR eventually did beat itself. Won’t be different with the good ol’ USofA.

    “Thus, China has decided to defeat America from within.”

    China can’t do that either, but they don’t have to. Again, China only has let time work for itself, the US is blowing up itself.

    “It is also getting the Democrat Party to change the demography of America through massive immigration which will rot the U.S. out from the inside.”

    The Chinese had/have ZERO to do with inflicting mass immigration onto the US. That was entirely the work of organied US Jewry, the traditional fifth column within, the Great World Conspiracy or “World Plague” as Adi correctly identified them. Details here:

    https://www.jstor.org/stable/27503587

    1965, the Moment Supreme:

    https://tinyurl.com/2p8kxfzz

    The Texan closet jew LBJ signing the fateful 1965 Immigration Act, after he was complicit in killing his own master JFK first, with a little help from his friends in Israel (Yitzhak Rabin himself oversaw the killing in Dallas), making LBJ president on the cheap. Chinks had NOTHING to do with it.

    “The elites will have their dictatorship, but the country will collapse, and China will reap the benefit therefrom. ”

    Yep, it is unclear if ZOG can hold onto power or if the Yanks manage to escape from the (((Evil Potomac Regime))), but whatever the outcome, US hegemony will be thrown out of the window. If Yanks do nothing (can’t be ruled out), they will end up in a USSR-of-color.

    “And the leaders of the U.S. want the White race to go extinct.”

    Nah, they want to make them powerless and mix them with coloreds, not go extinct, as Washington still needs white competence to keep things running for them. They want to destroy white identity as a collective force. As long as whitey repents and grovels, he will be allowed to continue to exist, as a white guy. But he will be stripped of all what he is proud of, especially his Constitution, history and founding fathers.

    https://documents1940.wordpress.com/2017/09/27/paul-krugman-white-americans-are-losing-their-country/

    “Paul Krugman: “White Americans Are Losing Their Country””

    “So accept death, Whitey.”

    Defeatism. US white nationalists should use the coming likely military exchange in the SCS/over Taiwan, Gulf and/or Ukraine to escape from Washington, after the dilemma will have presented itself to notoriously complacent, lazy Yanks: either run the risk of dying abroad or at home.

    “Finally, the COVID-19 was engineered in China. Despite denials from everywhere, that virus may in fact be a technique of biological warfare against the West.”

    That is very unlikely, considering that the pandemic started in Wuhan.

    You always need to take Glenn Beck with a grain of salt, nevertheless he makes a number of good points:

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=91Ib5NjSZ-o

    A more likely scenario is that the US AND China did cooperate on Corona, years before the breakout of pandemic.

    I have no proof, but I find the scenario that US secret services released the virus in Wuhan more credible than that China inflicted the wound upon itself. The US could use the existence of the lab in Wuhan as a plausible explanation of Covid-as-an-escape-from-lab-accident.

    Perhaps it was an accident.

    Perhaps US pharmaceutical firms were behind the stunt (Pfizer).

    Nobody knows for sure.

  3. Outcast_Searcher on Mon, 6th Dec 2021 10:57 am 

    In 2 years, the Berlin Tesla gigafactory and the Austin Tesla gigafactory will likely be producing similar numbers to what’s produced in the Tesla Shanghai gigafactory, given their planned capacaties and plans for continuing to expand in Shanghai.

    Tesla will build where it makes sense for them financially, over time. I expect them to get much bigger both within and outside China, as long as they don’t stop innovating and lowering their costs over time.

    So yes, if the US wants to get serious overall, re BEV production, it needs to get companies like GM and Ford seriously MASS producing lots of models, not claiming hapless GM/Barra claims make them the “leader” in BEV’s to try and buy union votes for the dems — i.e. politics as usual, but lacking substance.

    Tesla has plenty of issues, but at least it’s actually doing something meaningful re scaling up BEV production that there is LOTS of global demand for.

  4. Davis Jaime on Tue, 7th Dec 2021 9:51 am 

    When someone thinks of an electric car, the first name that comes to mind is probably Tesla. Tesla’s factory in Shanghai now produces more cars than its factory in California. Some control batteries are made in China, and the minerals that power the batteries are largely refined and mined by Chinese companies.

    China is the world’s largest market for electric vehicles, with total sales of 1.3 million vehicles last year, accounting for more than 40% of worldwide sales. Chinese battery maker CATL controls about 30% of the world EV battery market.

    Most of the cobalt comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), where nearly 70% of the mining sector is dominated by Chinese companies. And China is now the largest global nickel production market, beating competition from Europe and the US. Along with that is the strong intervention of the government to help China’s electric vehicle market rise to the top.

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