Tesla’s vision of EVs without rare earth elements spurs race

An employee shows rare earth oxides, coming out of the separation process in Silmet factory in Sillame, Estonia, on Friday, Jan. 20, 2023. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Peter Kollanyi
An employee shows rare earth oxides, coming out of the separation process in Silmet factory in Sillame, Estonia, on Friday, Jan. 20, 2023. MUST CREDIT: Bloomberg photo by Peter Kollanyi

Tesla's ambition to remove rare earth elements from future models has producers in the sector reeling, but it also should spur global efforts to deliver alternatives for electric car motors that currently rely on the materials.

Model 3 and Model Y powertrains have already reduced consumption of heavy rare earth elements by a quarter, and Tesla's next drive unit includes a permanent magnet motor that doesn't use any of the materials, Colin Campbell, vice president of powertrain engineering, said during the company's investor day early this month.

The automaker is looking to keep driving down costs, avoid processes with environmental and health risks and reduce reliance on commodities that can be most susceptible to wild price swings.

Rare earth elements -- which are used in magnets in everything from phones to wind turbines and fighter aircraft -- have long been a pain point for automakers and the clean-energy sector, because of unpredictable prices and China's tight grip on the supply chain. China accounts for around two-thirds of mining and 85% of refining of the materials.

The risks of reliance on Beijing were highlighted in 2010, when prices spiked on China's decision to slash exports, and in 2019 and 2020 amid speculation that shipments could be limited again amid trade tensions with the U.S.

Others carmakers including BMW, Toyota and General Motors also have sought to reduce reliance on rare earth elements.

Shares of producers including JL Mag Rare-Earth and Jiangsu Huahong Technology Stock immediately sold off after Campbell's comments, while Lynas Rare Earths -- the biggest producer of the materials outside China -- is down about a quarter this month.

The lack of diversity in rare-earth permanent magnet supply chains is "a key concern for the industry within the geopolitics of critical materials," said Nils Backeberg, founder at London-based consultancy Project Blue. "Use of cheaper -- though less performance -- and efficiency-focused -- technologies is likely to become more widespread."

One potential alternative could be ferrite magnets, made of iron and mixed with materials like barium and strontium, which are more widely available and cheaper, according to William Roberts, a senior research analyst at London-based consultancy Rho Motion.

GM has previously used these, and Japan-based Proterial said in December it had developed motors using ferrite magnets that matched the performance of components using rare earth elements.

Minneapolis-based Niron Magnetics, which has partnered with Volvo, last year won a $17.5 million U.S. Energy Department grant to help scale up work on rare-earth-free magnets that use iron nitride-based technology.

A team from the University of Cambridge and colleagues from Austria announced a new method to make tetrataenite, a possible replacement for rare-earth magnets, in a research paper published last year.

Ferrite magnets are the most likely candidate for Tesla's innovation, research firm Adamas Intelligence said in a note, though the technology faces a challenge as it has traditionally come with a "significant weight or efficiency penalty."

Existing rare-earth-based motor systems also have a track record of efficiency, and demand for the materials in electric vehicles and renewables energy is forecast to surge.

About $3.8 billion of magnet rare-earth oxides were consumed in energy-transition related applications in 2022, and the figure will reach more than $36 billion in 2035, Adamas forecasts.

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