Europe's wind and e-car industry dependent on China's magnetic metals
The green energy industry, in particular the wind energy sector, has become increasingly dependent on China for vital magnetic metals, writes Stefan Hajek in WirtschaftsWoche Online. Wind farms are set to play an ever larger role in the world’s future energy supply. Offshore wind power capacity in the EU alone is expected to increase 25-fold by 2050.
Magnetic metals such as neodymium are an essential component for wind turbines as well as for every modern electric motor, including those used in almost every electric car and plug-in hybrid. That’s leading to a bottleneck in two main sectors of the energy transition that very few political leaders and industry executives have addressed, Hajek notes. The extraction and processing of neodymium almost entirely in the hands of one country, China. The country already used its market power once before, in 2009, and paralysed entire industries worldwide with an export boycott on rare earths for computers.
Hajek warns that China could do this again in other industries in view of its ongoing trade conflicts with the US, which he says are not expected to ease under President-elect Joe Biden. “This time there is even more at stake than in 2009,” Hajek writes. “Without a sufficient supply of magnetic metals, climate protection will be much more difficult, protracted and much more expensive,” says Oliver Gutfleisch, professor of Functional Materials at the Technical University of Darmstadt. “The energy transition is also a material transition -- it doesn't work without certain raw materials. That is often overlooked.” Read original full article
#Government Policies
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Atlantis Viewpoint
Europe's wind and e-car industry dependent on China's magnetic metals
Dependence on specific materials for clean energy production and electric cars could potentially cause a problem in future with the large-scale expansion we need to see. Wind turbines use more rare metals than CSP plants, as each individual turbine has its own electricity generator.
Thankfully, Concentrated Solar Power can work with the same amount that has been used in all the old fossil fuel thermal plants. However mass-producing millions of new electric cars will require a lot of magnetic metals which could see resources running low, we’ll have to make sure there are alternatives available.