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China Power

China Restricts Exports of Graphite As It Escalates a Global Tech War (cnn.com) 51

An anonymous reader quotes a report from CNN: China has unveiled plans to restrict exports of graphite -- a mineral crucial to the manufacture of batteries for electric vehicles (EVs) -- on national security grounds, the Ministry of Commerce and the General Administration of Customs said Friday. The announcement comes just days after the United States imposed additional limits on the kinds of semiconductors that American companies can sell to Chinese firms. China, which dominates the world's production and processing of graphite, says export permits will be needed, starting in December, for synthetic graphite material -- including high-purity, high-strength and high-density versions -- as well as for natural flake graphite. [...]

According to the US Geological Survey (PDF), the market for graphite used in batteries has grown 250% globally since 2018. China was the world's leading graphite producer last year, accounting for an estimated 65% of global production, it said. Besides EVs, graphite is commonly used in the semiconductor, aerospace, chemical and steel industries. The export curbs were announced as China faces pressure from multiple governments over its commercial and trade practices. For more than a year, it has been embroiled in a tech war with the United States and its allies in Europe and Asia over access to advanced chips and chipmaking equipment.
"At the moment both China and Western countries are engaged in a tit for tat, highlighting how protectionist measures often spread. Newton's third law that every action causes a reaction applies here, too," said Stefan Legge, head of tax and trade policy research at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland.

"At the same time, both sides of the dispute also realize how costly it is if geopolitics trumps economics," he added.
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China Restricts Exports of Graphite As It Escalates a Global Tech War

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  • by Kunedog ( 1033226 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @08:04AM (#63941783)
    Now what will we tip our control rods with?
  • by rossdee ( 243626 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @08:48AM (#63941827)

    We'll have to cut back on pencils in schools.

    • You don't get it.

      Graphite makes up 95-99% of the anode (negative electrode) material in lithium-ion batteries, making it the largest component in any EV battery.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Don't worry dear! Mr. Biden has already taken action to counter this threat by banning mining of graphite in the US.

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @08:51AM (#63941829)
    On the most common element in the universe? Doom. Doom I say.
    • by Ol Olsoc ( 1175323 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @09:05AM (#63941841)

      On the most common element in the universe? Doom. Doom I say.

      Yeah, I did do an eye roll when I saw the article. I took a look, and if Turkey wants to enter the game, they have the biggest reserves in the world.

      Interestingly, US doesn't have any graphite processing at the moment, but is considering to open processing at the aptly names Graphite Creek in the Seward Peninsula in Alaska. There are other locations in the US that either have known resources, or were once mined.

      So okay China, you do you.

    • by beelsebob ( 529313 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @09:18AM (#63941857)

      The most common element in the universe is hydrogen, by a wide margin. And thatâ(TM)s even measuring by mass. By mole itâ(TM)s an even wider margin.

      Carbon is⦠not uncommon though.

      • Haha oops. Yeah my bad on that one.
      • by Anonymous Coward
        Buy two and get one oxygen free. Now available on Earth. Supply may be limited in some areas.
        • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

          Buy two and get one oxygen free. Now available on Earth. Supply may be limited in some areas.

          You mean get one get 2 oxygens free.

          Carbon isn't the most common element, but it's one that's annoyingly in a lot of chemical reactions we do on the planet - the whole carbon cycle thing that powers all of life as we know it.

          Graphite is also a common form of pure carbon, just like how diamond is another form of carbon. The pencil "lead" is basically graphite - so... no more Chinese made pencils?

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      China produces the majority of the world's graphite. By limiting exports, they will force the price up for everyone else, at a time when most developed nations are trying to ramp up battery production as quickly as possible.

      And keep in mind that China already has a big lead in battery technology.

      • by RitchCraft ( 6454710 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @01:40PM (#63942301)

        Yeah, they are experts on producing batteries that ignite spontaneously. Huge lead!

      • China produces the majority of the world's graphite. By limiting exports, they will force the price up for everyone else, at a time when most developed nations are trying to ramp up battery production as quickly as possible.

        And keep in mind that China already has a big lead in battery technology.

        Both the West and China are playing the export restriction game. Just as the unavailability of Western computing equipment might stimulate the production of Chinese indigenous products, the unavailability of Chinese manufacturing materials might stimulate the production of non-Chinese products. This is especially true for markets such as graphite where China only nominally dominates and where that domination is not due to resource or technology scarcity. This is in contrast to some of the Western sanctio

  • by Anonymous Coward

    ... Newton's third law that every action causes a reaction applies here, too," said Stefan Legge,

    I think/hope Stefan is speaking metaphorically here, because ... you know what, nevermind. Further, a country in motion will move in a straight line until a force acts upon it. Finally, a trade policy's net force is equal to its mass times its acceleration. We all know this from highschool economics.

  • by shoor ( 33382 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @10:27AM (#63941953)

    I thought the Chinese economy depended heavily on exports and trade, and that right now their economy has some big internal problems. If that is so, (and maybe it isn't, maybe I've watched too many Peter Zeihan videos on youtube lately), then who is going to be hurt the most by this?

    • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

      I thought the Chinese economy depended heavily on exports and trade, and that right now their economy has some big internal problems. If that is so, (and maybe it isn't, maybe I've watched too many Peter Zeihan videos on youtube lately), then who is going to be hurt the most by this?

      China, but the real danger is that if they have lots of out-of-work people to spare, their government has little reason not to send them to war.

    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      China is doing a hell lot better than Peter Zeihan espouses. Of the total share of the world's gdp growth, according to the IMF, China + India equals half of the total's world gdp growth for 2023. China share of that is 2 times more than India's in raw numbers simply because of how huge the size of the economy is in comparison. The GDP growth in raw numbers is also higher than the US of course.

      China could easily release more funds through fiscal/monetary policy, to create sugar high type craze like the US

    • by bloodhawk ( 813939 ) on Sunday October 22, 2023 @12:50AM (#63943047)
      of course they have heavily dependent on trade, But what are they supposed to do? Just stand idly by while the US stacks on more trade sanctions? The US is using trade as a tool of war, can't blame countries for responding in kind.
  • "Newton's third law that every action causes a reaction applies here, too," said Stefan Legge, head of tax and trade policy research at the University of St Gallen in Switzerland.

    The irony of Baking Soda trying to comment from a position of neutrality. How cute.

    In the immortal words of Michael Jordan, stop it. Get some help. Politics is the first law here. Duh.

  • "China Restricts Exports of Graphite As the US Escalated a Global Tech War" It's just in response to the export restrictions layed down by the US.
    • exactly. They made a point of labelling it as due to national security concerns to reflect exactly what the USA is doing as well. The USA has decided whenever you label a restriction as due to national security you don't need to justify it.
  • [joke]I want to kick China right in the Buckyballs![/joke]
  • So, high tech war, fought over and by raw resource allocations.

  • by Ungrounded Lightning ( 62228 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @06:32PM (#63942697) Journal

    So get it from Canida:

    Mine production: 15,000 MT

    Canada's graphite production rose by 3,000 MT in 2022 over the previous year. Interest in Canada as a source of graphite has been rising for the past few years, particularly since Tesla (NASDAQ:TSLA) said it plans to source the lithium, graphite and cobalt it needs for its Nevada-based lithium-ion battery gigafactory from North America. The Lac des Iles mine is the only mine in Canada that is producing graphite, but there are a number of graphite projects under development.

    • Canada and China produce this at vastly different scales. China produces double what the rest of the world combine produces, Canada would need to Scale up operations about 50 fold.
  • by nehumanuscrede ( 624750 ) on Saturday October 21, 2023 @09:03PM (#63942805)

    The US push for " Green Energy " including the conversion to all electric vehicles is a non-starter as long as the US remains reliant upon China for both the materials and refinement of said materials needed for battery tech.

    The ONLY way this works is if:

    1) China and the US suddenly decide to play together nicely ( never going to happen with Taiwan in the middle )
    2) The US either becomes self reliant or finds another source of aforementioned materials needed for all things high-tech.

    Why the idiots in charge keep pushing for this whole " Green Revolution " without the means to make it happen in the first place is anyones guess.

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