Biden turns to Africa to counter China

From: POLITICO's Power Switch - Friday Jan 20,2023 10:02 pm
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By Arianna Skibell

Artisanal cobalt mining

Artisanal cobalt mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo. | Afrewatch 2020/International Institute for Environment and Development/Flickr

The U.S. effort to wrest control of the supply chain for electric car batteries from China is playing out in African mines, where reports of child abuse and forced labor are rampant, writes POLITICO’s E&E News reporter David Iaconangelo.

Zambia and Congo are major sources of cobalt and copper, key ingredients for lithium-ion batteries. Once extracted, the bulk of those minerals are exported to China, where 75 percent of the world’s lithium-ion batteries are made.

The U.S. wants to disrupt that flow by helping Congo and Zambia not only extract minerals but also process, manufacture and assemble them into batteries. “This is the future, and it is happening in [Congo] and in Zambia,” Secretary of State Antony Blinken proclaimed last month at the signing of a U.S. agreement with the central and southern African nations.

While the U.S. agreement to help these African countries create a competitive battery industry doesn’t mention China, success there could create a new base for competing against the Asian superpower. At the same time, it could open the door for new partnerships with U.S. car companies.

That could be crucial for helping President Joe Biden meet his goals of having electric vehicles account for half of all new U.S. car sales by decade’s end. Analysts predict a looming supply shortage of critical minerals.

Where this gets controversial: Labor abuses are well known in the Congolese cobalt sector, which provides 70 percent of the world’s supply. Both Amnesty International and the U.S. Labor Department have documented human rights violations such as forced child labor.

Human rights advocates have denounced the State Department’s overture to Africa’s major miners as unconscionable, as have Republicans who would like to see the White House get behind more domestic critical minerals mining. Other analysts say U.S. influence could help enforce global labor standards.

 

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Known as a center for lobbyists, lawyers and think tanks, the K Street corridor is seen in northwest Washington. | J. Scott Applewhite/AP Photo

Scoring cash from the new climate law, filling energy gaps spurred by the Russian war in Ukraine and swaying the Biden administration on regulations are top priorities for energy and environmental lobbyists this year, write Robin Bravender and Timothy Cama.

After recent years were dominated by lobbying Congress on big-ticket legislation, much of the action will move to the executive branch this year — though not all.

Here's what 10 influential energy and environmental lobbyists say they’re planning to focus on in the year ahead.

Power Centers

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Waves lap ashore near condo buildings in Sunny Isles, Fla., on Aug. 9, 2021. | Joe Raedle/Getty Images

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Among climate wonks, few topics spur as much debate as the role of voluntary carbon markets in the fight against global warming, writes Avery Ellfeldt.

To some, they are a scam. To others, an innovation solution. Either way, there’s a growing effort to bring order to the voluntary carbon market and put uniform rules in place.

GOP scrutiny begins
House Republicans are aiming to reverse a controversial Biden administration decision that waived solar tariffs against Chinese-made solar products coming from Southeast Asia, writes Brian Dabbs.

Rep. Bob Latta of Ohio is planning to bring administration officials before the Energy and Commerce Committee to grill them on the decision.

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Months of European frustration with the billion-dollar subsidies in Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act kept simmering anew this week on the continent, leading to some tense moments at the World Economic Forum that ended today in Davos, Switzerland, POLITICO's Alexander Ward and Suzanne Lynch report.

Some EU leaders aired their gripes directly to Sen. Joe Manchin, the law's chief architect — who insisted that "this piece of legislation was not intended to harm anybody. It was intended to keep America strong so we could help our friends."

Meanwhile, EU countries are starting to introduce their own subsidy packages, and French President Emmanuel Macron and Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sánchez have agreed to jointly pursue a “proactive” response, writes Clea Caulcutt.

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