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

A new report finds that China controls over 80 percent of minerals essential for U.S. military batteries.
China’s Battery Mineral Monopoly Poses National Security Risk: Report
Employees working at a factory that produces lithium battery for export in Huaibei, in eastern China's Anhui province on June 11, 2024. STR/AFP via Getty Images
|Updated:
0:00

China monopolizes more than 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 nonmarket 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-based think tank.