The Energy Department announced plans to funnel over $3 billion into proposed projects across the U.S. for producing advanced batteries and materials.
Why it matters: It’s among the biggest White House efforts to seed a domestic supply chain for materials used in EVs and energy storage.
These subsidies sit at the intersection of threeadministrationgoals: energy transition, building U.S. industries, and countering China’s dominance in this space.
Driving the news: It’s the second funding round for these kinds of projects under the 2021 infrastructure law. Among the 25 developments across 14 states will be:
$225 million for SWA Lithium — a JV between Standard Lithium and energy giant Equinor — to extract the material from Arkansas’ Smackover Formation.
$166 million for the South32 Hermosa Project to produce manganese sulfate monohydrate — a material used in EV batteries — in Arizona. There’s also $166 million for Element 25 (Louisiana) to refine the material.
$155 million for American Battery Technology Co. to build a recycling plant in South Carolina.
$100 million for Mitra Chem to build a Michigan plant for making lithium iron phosphate (LFP) cathode active materials, a key battery component.
$199 million for EnerSys Advanced Systems to produce lithium-ion cells in South Carolina.
Yes, but: The cash doesn’t all arrive at once. Companies must meet various milestones, and some first-round projects have not ultimately gotten the money.
An official told reporters that negotiations can end for reasons like companies having siting problems, changing their project scope, and pursuing other kinds of financing.
What they’re saying: Mitra Chem CEO Vivas Kumar said the DOE selection matters for reasons beyond the cash itself.
He says the DOE choosing Mitra after careful technical vetting helps “de-risk” the project for outside investors.
Kumar is also optimistic that the project’s economic footprint insulates it from a potential political change, despite Donald Trump’s criticism of EVs.
It would create hundreds of construction jobs and 150 permanent jobs in Muskegon, Michigan, he said.
The bottom line: National Economic Adviser Lael Brainard told reporters the awards move the U.S. closer to “building an end-to-end supply chain for batteries and critical minerals here in America, from mining to processing to manufacturing and recycling, which is vital to reduce China’s dominance of this critical sector.”