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Saudi Arabia’s EV Battery Bets Are a Warning

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Apart from China, no country has managed to achieve manufacturing scale. That may be about to change.

The world’s oil capital wants to go electric and get clean. To do so, it’s getting its hands on minerals critical for batteries and taking a stake in the electric vehicle-supply chain. That should put countries and companies prone to announcing ambitious plans but then doing little to make them a reality on high alert, writes Anjani Trivedi.


As shortages loom and firms attempt to secure prohibitively expensive resources in a bid to scale up manufacturing, Saudi Arabia has drawn in lithium miners and battery makers to set up operations, filling a critical gap. The country wants 30% of cars on its capital city’s roads to be electric by the end of this decade.

Australian battery chemicals and technology company EV Metals Group said it was kicking off the development of its processing plants for lithium hydroxide monohydrate — a key compound for batteries — deepening its plans in the kingdom.

The firm has worked with its partners for the past two years on feasibility studies, and the facility now plans to produce high-grade chemicals for cathode materials in power packs, an important component that EV makers are trying to get their hands on.

Another Australian firm, Avass Group, announced it signed an agreement in February to jointly manufacture electric vehicles and lithium batteries with the country.

Along with these commitments, Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources has announced $6 billion of projects as part of a larger push to boost its mining industry. It’s also processing almost 150 exploration license applications from foreign companies.

The government signed an agreement to buy as many as 100 000 electric vehicles over 10 years from Lucid Group, an EV maker that the country’s sovereign wealth fund has a stake in. It is allocating more than $3 billion in financing and incentives to set up the plant over the next decade and a half. Foxconn Technology Group, the largest assembler of iPhones, was in talks to establish a $9 billion facility that could make chips and EV parts.

Shrewd move

Creating manufacturing and processing facilities within its borders is a shrewd and prescient move. Not only will it eventually help bring down the costs, but more immediately — and importantly — will ensure the nation becomes a key part of the global electric vehicle-value chain. So far, besides China and its behemoth battery makers, few others have been able to achieve manufacturing scale.

Saudi Arabia has the resources, capital and conviction — and that’s exactly what’s missing for many companies and countries. It’s now using its oil-price and demand advantage to make a transition that others are struggling with. Its geographical position adds to that, allowing it to supply Europe and get resources from China and Australia.

The kingdom has started assessing and issuing mining licenses quickly to tap into its mineral resources, with an estimated potential value of $1.3 trillion. Compare that to the US, where permitting is held up and approvals for such extraction plans have fallen to multi-year lows.

Meanwhile, it could develop its own resources, too: The lithium in the salty brine byproduct around its oilfields is becoming a key source for the metal as a supply deficit widens. Researchers are now working on economically efficient ways to remove and process the lithium into a pure enough form for use in batteries.

Saudi Arabia’s advance into battery materials, as shortages raise costs and companies’ battle tightening green regulations to get ahead, is turning what stands to be a huge threat to its economy into a long-term benefit.

It’s almost too late for the US and parts of Europe to catch up. Other places in the Middle East are also looking to make the transition away from their economic reliance on oil toward greener technology. Abu Dhabi recently drew in a lithium firm to build facilities at the Khalifa Industrial Zone to extract the metal and recover valuable by-products from lithium-mica and phosphate minerals.

It shouldn’t be a surprise, then, if firms and nations soon end up swapping their dependence on Saudi Arabian oil for critical battery materials, much like they’ve had to do with China.


https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/a...a-warning-to-those-going-slow-on-clean-energy
 
I am calling it now. In 1-2 decades (probably more realistically in 2 decades), KSA will become a technological heavyweight/powerhouse.

Endless money, clever leadership willing and obsessed (their future rule depends on it) about diversifying and focusing on education and science (KSA has probably had the biggest investments in this regard per capita in the world and taken huge steps forward in a very short time), KSA having enormous natural and mineral wealth, history of scientific innovation (Islamic Golden Age and even in ancient pre-Islamic civilizations), one of the youngest populations in the world, growing population and great focus on STEM. Or the boom in the indigenous military sector which is closely ties to the scientific and educational development within KSA itself.

We already see this development going one way (ahead and improving each year) in various scientific lists (KSA is almost always in the top 20, at the least top 25 worldwide) and various scientific competitions.

KSA sovereign wealth funds are also deliberately investing in AI and scientific endeavors quite intensively. NEOM itself is basically a manifestation of this ambition.

Remains to be seen if successful but the potential is definitely there.

As a side note, KSA would do wisely in following the US model (green card) to foreign (Arab or non-Arab, should not matter), scientists/STEM students etc. who want to/prefer to live in a Muslim society exempt from taxation, great security, cosmopolitan environment, great wages, weather, Makkah and Madinah (religious reasons basically) etc. and whatever KSA has of benefits compared to other nations. I think that the political/societal changes from the leadership in KSA are also aimed at not only developing a thriving tourism sector but becoming more attractive as a country for such people potentially and any outside investors for that matter. This is already showing in terms of foreign investment capital flowing into KSA.
 
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now instead of OPEC there will be OLEC?
Jan 25, 2023 - 04:31 pm

EV Metals to build processing complex in Saudi Arabia​

AUSTRALIABATTERIESBATTERY CELLSCOBALTEV METALSLITHIUM HYDROXIDEMANGANESENICKELRAW MATERIALSSAUDI ARABIASUPPLIERYANBU

The Australian battery materials company EV Metals Group has secured 127 hectares of land in Saudi Arabia to build a battery chemicals processing complex. Production of lithium hydroxide at the plant located in Yanbu Industrial City is scheduled to start in 2026.

The Australian company’s offshoot EVM Arabia has also already received an environmental permit for the planned complex. Here, raw materials from Western Australia will be processed to produce high-purity chemicals for electric vehicle batteries containing lithium, nickel, cobalt, manganese and other metals for the downstream production of active cathode materials. Construction is scheduled to begin in the third quarter of this year.

The complex will be divided into different plants. The lithium chemicals plant for the production of high-purity lithium hydroxide monohydrate (LHM) is to be built first with two production lines. Four more are to follow by 2030, by which time the nickel refining plant, among others, will also be in operation.

The primary products from EVM are to be exported to Saudi Arabia and processed there. Two electric car plants have already been announced in Saudi Arabia although plans for a corresponding battery production plant have not yet been revealed. Lucid Motors wants to build a plant for up to 150,000 electric cars in Saudi Arabia, while the second plant was announced by Foxconnfor Ceer brand electric cars, a joint venture of Foxconn and the Saudi sovereign wealth fund PIF. Both plants are to be built in the King Abdullah Economic City (KAEC). The EV Metals complex in Yanbu is just over 200 kilometres north, but also on the Red Sea coast.

The Australian company says that the production of lithium hydroxide is scheduled to begin in 2026. The initial plan is to produce 50,000 tonnes and later 150,000 tonnes per year. In addition to the environmental permit, EVM Arabia has already received a gas and electricity allocation from Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Energy, which will cover the energy needs of lithium hydroxide production.

“Our Battery Chemicals Complex is strategically located to serve demand for high purity chemicals from electric vehicle and battery cell manufacturers both locally and from target markets in Europe and North America looking for stable and transparent supply chains,” says Michael Naylor, Chairman of EVM Arabia and Managing Director and CEO of EVM Group.

While Saudi Arabia is a long way from Australia, the Australian company has existing interests relatively close by in the UK. In May last year, after the British chemical company Johnson Matthey surprisingly announced its withdrawal from the business with battery materials for the automotive industry in November 2021, the Australian EV Metals Group acquired Johnson Matthey’s assets at the Battery Technology Centre in Oxford and the Battery Technology Centre and Pilot Plant in Billingham, a research centre in Moosburg, Germany, and a partially constructed site in Konin, Poland, for £50 million (59 million euros). The sale also included Johnson Matthey’s eLNO technology based on the GEMX and CAM-7 cathode platforms.


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