China’s Battery Mineral Monopoly Poses National Security Risk: Report 

Date:

China’s Battery Mineral Monopoly Poses National Security Risk: Report 

Employees work at a factory that produces lithium battery for export in Huaibei, China, on June 11, 2024. STR/AFP via Getty Images

China monopolizes over 80 percent of critical raw battery minerals used in U.S. military equipment, posing a serious national security threat, new research has found.

Beijing’s “brute force economics” utilizes a bevy of non-market practices, including price manipulation, export dumping, and intellectual property theft, to build a dominant supply chain of batteries that are essential in cars, cellphones, and U.S. military drones, according to a July 21 report from Foundation for Defense of Democracies (FDD), a Washington D.C.-based think tank.

spot_imgspot_imgspot_img

Share post:

More like this
Related

US Increasingly Striking From Inside Irans Airspace as It Gains Air Dominance: Hegseth

ARLINGTON, Va.—Secretary of War Pete Hegseth announced on March...

Shanghai Petitioner Says Plainclothes Men Blocked Complaint at Prosecutors Office

Petitioners are escorted to a bus by security personnel...

Man Ejected From Asian Cup Soccer Match for Leading Team Taiwan Chant

Taiwan's Chen Yinghui (R) and India's Manisha Kalyan battle...

FDA Expands Approval of GSKs Respiratory Syncytial Virus Vaccine

Adults as young as 18 can now receive the...