Tesla Inks Deal to Get Key Battery Component Outside China

FILE - A Tesla Supercharger station in Buford, Ga, on April 22, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson, File)
FILE - A Tesla Supercharger station in Buford, Ga, on April 22, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson, File)
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Tesla Inks Deal to Get Key Battery Component Outside China

FILE - A Tesla Supercharger station in Buford, Ga, on April 22, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson, File)
FILE - A Tesla Supercharger station in Buford, Ga, on April 22, 2021. (AP Photo/Chris Carlson, File)

Tesla is turning to Mozambique for a key component in its electric car batteries in what analysts believe is a first-of-its-kind deal designed to reduce its dependence on China for graphite.

Elon Musk's company signed an agreement last month with Australia's Syrah Resources, which operates one of the world´s largest graphite mines in the southern African country. It's a unique partnership between an electric vehicle manufacturer and a producer of the mineral that is critical for lithium-ion batteries. The value of the deal hasn't been released.

Tesla will buy the material from the company's processing plant in Vidalia, Louisiana, which sources graphite from its mine in Balama, Mozambique. The Austin, Texas-based electric automaker plans to buy up 80% of what the plant produces - 8,000 tons of graphite per year - starting in 2025, according to the agreement. Syrah must prove the material meets Tesla´s standards.

The deal is part of Tesla's plan to ramp up its capacity to make its own batteries so it can reduce its dependence on China, which dominates global graphite markets, said Simon Moores of United Kingdom-based battery materials data and intelligence provider, Benchmark Mineral Intelligence.

"It starts at the top with geopolitics," Moores said. "The U.S. wants to build enough capacity domestically to be able to build (lithium-ion batteries) within the USA. And this deal will permit Tesla to source graphite independent from China."

Moores said producing the batteries in the U.S. will reduce some of the questions Tesla is facing about its ties to China, where there are environmental concerns at some mines. The automaker also has set up a showroom in the region of Xinjiang, where Chinese officials are accused of forced labor and other human rights abuses against mostly Muslim ethnic minorities.



Australia Regulator Says YouTube, Others ‘Turning a Blind Eye’ to Child Abuse Material 

07 December 2017, Berlin: The logo of the video portal YouTube is seen at the YouTube Space in Berlin. (dpa)
07 December 2017, Berlin: The logo of the video portal YouTube is seen at the YouTube Space in Berlin. (dpa)
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Australia Regulator Says YouTube, Others ‘Turning a Blind Eye’ to Child Abuse Material 

07 December 2017, Berlin: The logo of the video portal YouTube is seen at the YouTube Space in Berlin. (dpa)
07 December 2017, Berlin: The logo of the video portal YouTube is seen at the YouTube Space in Berlin. (dpa)

Australia’s internet watchdog has said the world’s biggest social media firms are still “turning a blind eye” to online child sex abuse material on their platforms, and said YouTube in particular had been unresponsive to its enquiries.

In a report released on Wednesday, the eSafety Commissioner said YouTube, along with Apple, failed to track the number of user reports it received of child sex abuse appearing on their platforms and also could not say how long it took them to respond to such reports.

The Australian government decided last week to include YouTube in its world-first social media ban for teenagers, following eSafety's advice to overturn its planned exemption for the Alphabet-owned Google's video-sharing site.

“When left to their own devices, these companies aren’t prioritizing the protection of children and are seemingly turning a blind eye to crimes occurring on their services,” eSafety Commissioner Julie Inman Grant said in a statement.

“No other consumer-facing industry would be given the license to operate by enabling such heinous crimes against children on their premises, or services.”

A Google spokesperson said “eSafety’s comments are rooted in reporting metrics, not online safety performance”, adding that YouTube's systems proactively removed over 99% of all abuse content before being flagged or viewed.

“Our focus remains on outcomes and detecting and removing (child sexual exploitation and abuse) on YouTube,” the spokesperson said in a statement.

Meta - owner of Facebook, Instagram and Threads, three of the biggest platforms with more than 3 billion users worldwide - has said it prohibits graphic videos.

The eSafety Commissioner, an office set up to protect internet users, has mandated Apple, Discord, Google, Meta, Microsoft, Skype, Snap and WhatsApp to report on the measures they take to address child exploitation and abuse material in Australia.

The report on their responses so far found a “range of safety deficiencies on their services which increases the risk that child sexual exploitation and abuse material and activity appear on the services”.

Safety gaps included failures to detect and prevent livestreaming of the material or block links to known child abuse material, as well as inadequate reporting mechanisms.

It said platforms were also not using “hash-matching” technology on all parts of their services to identify images of child sexual abuse by checking them against a database. Google has said before that its anti-abuse measures include hash-matching technology and artificial intelligence.

The Australian regulator said some providers had not made improvements to address these safety gaps on their services despite it putting them on notice in previous years.

“In the case of Apple services and Google’s YouTube, they didn’t even answer our questions about how many user reports they received about child sexual abuse on their services or details of how many trust and safety personnel Apple and Google have on-staff,” Inman Grant said.