Tuesday, August 13, 2024

Your next car might come with a battery passport

A newsletter from POLITICO for leaders building a sustainable future.
Aug 13, 2024 View in browser
 
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By James Bikales and Jordan Wolman

THE BIG IDEA

Volvo's EX90, seen at its launch event in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2022, will be the first car produced with a battery passport

Volvo's EX90, seen at its launch event in Stockholm, Sweden, in 2022, will be the first car produced with a battery passport | Anders Wiklund/TT News Agency/AFP via Getty Images

STREET CRED — As electric vehicle adoption grows, governments and car buyers are increasingly want assurances that their batteries aren’t tied to child labor in the Congo, open-pit mines in Indonesia or coal-belching factories in China.

Enter the battery passport: a digital identifier that allows companies and regulators to trace critical minerals from source to auto dealers, simplifying a task that has been largely impossible up to now.

Governments and automakers on both sides of the Atlantic are moving to embrace the emerging technology. Volvo announced in June that its flagship EX90 SUV will become the first vehicle with a battery passport tracking the origins of its minerals and carbon footprint. That move was spurred by an EU regulation that will require EVs to include that data by 2027.

In the U.S., automakers need to trace the origins of their minerals to qualify for the Inflation Reduction Act’s EV tax credit, which is tied to escalating requirements for domestic sourcing of battery minerals.

The technology is gaining steam amid broad consensus in Washington and Brussels around the need to reshore manufacturing and minimize reliance on adversaries like China, your hosts report.

“There is a genuine concern as to origin and process and standards that accompany the suppliers out there,” Rep. Paul Tonko (D-N.Y.), who introduced a bipartisan bill this spring that would launch a program to develop the identifiers, said in an interview. “This is an effort to create a sustainable, environmentally friendly, worker-positive, consumer-enhancing outcome.”

Battery passports have the potential to reward car buyers with tax credits and an assurance that their EV isn’t supporting environmental degradation or human rights abuses far from home. They would also make it easier for manufacturers to show compliance with EU and U.S. rules, and advance those governments’ trade goals to increase domestic production.

“Being able to show that parts of your battery didn’t come from China is going to be hugely important,” said John Helveston, an assistant professor of engineering management and systems engineering at George Washington University. “It’s either going to mean a massive tariff or not, or it might mean whether you get part of an incentive or not in the U.S.”

Ellen Carey, chief external affairs officer at the U.K.-based startup Circulor, which developed the passport for Volvo, said it will add about $10 of cost per car, but will pay itself back by allowing Volvo to sell in the EU and access incentives in the U.S..

Even as policy starts to reflect the momentum toward transparency, it’s not certain that battery passports will become widely adopted in the auto industry.

Helveston said companies are likely to be hesitant to willingly share information like the carbon intensity of their facilities with other firms in the supply chain, creating the need for “trusted third parties” to validate the data. And Inga Petersen, executive director of the Global Battery Alliance, an Belgium-based initiative of the World Economic Forum, said cost is likely to be a barrier.

Another potential complication for companies lies in how they would deal with adverse information if battery passports are adopted, said Duncan Wood, president and CEO of the Pacific Council.

“Once you have greater supply chain transparency, what do you do with it?” he said. “Let’s say along the way you find forced child labor or horrible environmental extraction. Do you then say, ‘OK, we’re not going to buy from that place’ and interrupt the supply chain to considerable economic consequence? My understanding is that companies run screaming from these kinds of confrontations.”

AROUND THE NATION

MIND THE GAAP — The conservative war on ESG has made its way into the traditionally staid world of accounting, with a coalition of 26 state financial officers urging a key standard-setting panel not to "politicize" its principles by including climate disclosure reporting, Jordan reports.

The state officials wrote to the Financial Accounting Standards Board to preemptively express their opposition to include climate disclosure in its Generally Accepted Accounting Principles as the board works through a public consultation period.

The letter from the State Financial Officers Foundation calls out the SEC climate risk disclosure rule, among other frameworks around the world, as regulations "that purport to be about financial reporting but in reality are about commandeering the financial system to advance a substantive climate agenda that has not been democratically approved in the United States."

DATA DIVE

NEW CLIMATE DATA ON THE BLOCK — A new research and public opinion firm launching this week is looking to produce a steady stream of data points designed to help companies better market climate actions and products, increase revenue and strengthen brands.

Northwind Climate, which has a board of advisers including former Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick, gave Long Game an exclusive look at its first batch of findings based on four national surveys covering more than 12,000 consumers over the past five months.

Most of the company’s data will remain private for clients, but here are some early takeaways:

— Substantial chunks of consumers across the political spectrum are willing to pay a little more for products they know are produced sustainably, including 69 percent of Democrats and 43 percent of Republicans.

— Three-fourths of consumers don’t feel like they have enough information to make climate-friendly decisions and want companies, including financial institutions, to help them: 76 percent said they would be interested to know how their bank is investing their money, and 40 percent said they would be very or somewhat likely to switch banks if they learned their financial institution was a leading investor in fossil fuels.

— In tests of electric vehicle branding statements, only one company’s current message (Toyota) was generating a very positive response among a majority of potential buyers. Framings around providing choices (56 percent) and numerous choices (53 percent, Toyota) performed best; economical (41 percent, Chevrolet) and innovative and trailblazing (32 percent, Tesla) messages were the least popular.

WASHINGTON WATCH

CLIMATE DAYLIGHT — If nothing else, Elon Musk’s Monday night’s interview with former President Donald Trump exposed a split on climate change that might be worth watching.

The Tesla billionaire, a major supporter who has pledged to put some of his massive fortune behind Trump’s campaign, has already persuaded the Republican nominee to back off his stance against EVs. But broader differences remain, Scott Waldman and David Ferris report for POLITICO’s E&E News.

Musk tried during the interview to win Trump over on the need to transition away from fossil fuels.

“My view is, like, we do, over time, want to move to a sustainable energy economy, because eventually you do run out of, I mean, you run out of oil and gas,” he said. “It's not infinite and there is some risk.”

Trump didn’t buy that argument and told Musk that climate change would be beneficial because “you’ll have more oceanfront property.” He also said that “nuclear warming” — an apparent reference to nuclear war — was a bigger threat than global warming.

Movers and Shakers

FACE OF EPR — The organization tasked with implementing the nation’s first producer-responsibility laws for paper and packaging has named its CEO, Jeff Fielkow.

Fielkow will lead Circular Action Alliance, the nonprofit representing packaging producers including Amazon, Walmart and Coca-Cola, that’s been selected by regulators in California and Colorado to implement new recycling overhauls. Fielkow most recently served as president and CEO of ID Images LLC, a manufacturer of converted label products, and previously held executive positions at food-processing and packaging company Tetra Pak.

 

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YOU TELL US

GAME ON — Welcome to the Long Game, where we tell you about the latest on efforts to shape our future. Join us every Tuesday as we keep you in the loop on the world of sustainability.

Team Sustainability is editor Greg Mott and reporters Jordan Wolman and Allison Prang. Reach us all at gmott@politico.com, jwolman@politico.com and aprang@politico.com.

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WHAT WE'RE CLICKING

The Financial Times examines an emerging “ecosystem” of private and public initiatives aimed at finding ways to provide property insurance in a warming world.

Looking for ways to track the carbon footprint of your consumer activity? There are apps for that, Bloomberg reports.

The Washington Post takes a look at how South Korea manages to recycle nearly all of its food waste, and why its model would be difficult to replicate here.

 

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