Kansas Kid said:
nortex97 said:
Kansas Kid said:
nortex97 said:
hph6203 said:
I believe you passive aggressively tried to make the implication that the other posters on this thread are stupid and unaware of the existence of a benefit the transition to EVs provides to the Chinese. The point is that the majority of those that believe EVs will largely replace ICE are unconcerned by that fact because the benefits of transportation run off electricity outweigh the transfer of money to the Chinese.
A transfer of money at a rate that you so far have been unable to quantify. There is a big difference between the Chinese making $100 per vehicle sold and $10,000. At $100 per vehicle it's $1.5 billion annually at $10,000 it's $150 billion. Based upon what I know it's far closer to the $100 figure than the $10,000 figure for battery cells and packs manufactured in the U.S., which is why I'm unconcerned and have asked you to quantify it since you're so insistent, and have been for years now, that people should be concerned.
For someone so convinced of this I figured you'd have some data readily available to back it up.
I'm still waiting for someone to tell me a percentage of a battery for an EV that will be produced, for a given model, at a given date, that is of a specified non-CCP derived rate of materials sold in the US. I am disappointed no one has offered that.
I have no intent of deriding anyone's intelligence, despite your imputation of my motives. I'm not going to entertain hypothetical questions about 'relative value' until someone answers my question, reasonably. The only point I'd make is that if you can't produce/support these vehicles without that key CCP-heart of components, the battery/power source, then the relative cost of the raw material input isn't tremendously significant to the total retail price. And if it wasn't a big deal, well, the CCP wouldn't have worked so hard to corner the market in these refined metals globally.
If Joe Manchin is even worried the EV subsidies benefit China, is he also ignorant/stupid/naive, like me?
I think you know one can predict an exact date on something like that. I have twice posted that given the refineries being constructed outside China and the push for Tesla to use non-REE motors in their next power trains, you are looking at 2026-28 for the vast majority to be converted. I would bet on the model 3 and/or Y.
Now that I have done that, can you tell me when your beloved ICE vehicles will be off REE and any parts from China. Same thing with your cell phones, computers, clothes, etc….
PS. You know essentially all of us hate the subsidies for EVs and every other industry no matter who they go to. We also hate all the subsidies that have been given to the ICE manufacturers over the years. Can you say multibilllion dollar bailouts and pension contributions?!?!
A motor is not a battery, and REE is not that common in the battery anyway. Thank you though.
So are you saying there are no REE in ICE vehicles? Try again.
Here is a chart from an auto supplier showing where they are used in cars. Good luck running a car without an alternator or starter not to mention brakes.
No idea at all what your point here is but thank you for taking an increased interest in magnets. It's remarkable how such a simple question about EV batteries can generate so many responses from EV fans, without any on-point data within them.
Now, as an aside, as the resident EV CCP expert, I think I should share that the Biden regime issued new rules y
esterday trying to cut down on CCP if manufacturers 'vouch' for their supply chains. LOL. Sure thing, Albert Gore. Quote:
Under the proposal, automakers would vouch that their supplies came from companies that aren't headquartered in China and aren't controlled by Chinese companies or investors. Only deals that gave American manufacturers "effective control" over how products are made and sold would get federal funding, according to a senior administration official in a media briefing.
Albert Gore, the executive director of the Zero Emission Transportation Association, a trade group for EV-related companies, said that based on the limited information available, the rule is "an enforcement regime that seems to be workable."
The rule is targeted at so-called foreign entities of concern, a category created in last year's Inflation Reduction Act alongside generous funding for the EV supply chain. The definition includes several countries, but China is the significant one, given the country's dominance in the battery industry.
Unless they follow the government's measures, new EV supply-chain companies could lose access to $6 billion in federal grants. Automakers also won't be able to offer customers all or part of a $7,500 tax rebate on EV purchases.
The rule, which has a 30-day comment period, establishes the beginnings of a system for automakers to track critical minerals contained in their cars from the source and for the IRS and the Energy Department to review the materials that automakers procure. The new requirements will kick in over two years, starting in 2024.
Why are they having to do this if EV's don't come from CCP sourced goods/metals, already? Well, when none of our 'EV's are not CCP' posters have an answer, and even NPR has documented that…well the CCP is the big winner with EV's.
Quote:
DOMONOSKE: In fact, when it comes to the massive batteries that are essential to electric vehicles, China is way ahead. It controls something like three-quarters of the market for the raw materials that go into these batteries, like lithium, cobalt and nickel. So automakers rely on China for these minerals. And as companies go electric, they'll need a lot more.
KWASI AMPOFO: You're looking at a scenario where demand is going to jump about eight times what it is.
DOMONOSKE: Kwasi Ampofo is the head of metals and mining at BloombergNEF.
Now, it's not like China won the geological lottery and just happens to have a bunch of rich deposits. These particular minerals are in places like the Democratic Republic of the Congo, South America and Australia. Instead of getting lucky, China got busy.
AMPOFO: The other way of bringing metals onshore into your country is to build the refineries that are needed to actually refine these metals. And that is where the China story started 10 years ago.
DOMONOSKE: Beijing decided it wanted to dominate the electric vehicle market down to the minerals. China has an authoritarian government that often intervenes in the economy. When it makes a decision like this, it acts on it.
So is NPR, and Joe Manchin way off base on this? No, imho, and Americans should resist, as they are doing more and more, the push (not just 'mandates') from our CCP-friendly Democrat government toward buying CCP-backed EV's. It's not just the
4,000 car dealers' fault.