Turkey seeks Chinese partnership on rare earth elements for EVs
It hopes a breakthrough could compel Chinese companies such as BYD to produces batteries in the country
TURKEY is working towards teaming up with China to process a deposit of rare earth elements, a potential partnership that could make the country more appealing to Chinese manufacturers of electric vehicles (EVs) and batteries.
The government in Ankara is poised to dispatch Energy Minister Alparslan Bayraktar to lead a delegation to China in October for advanced talks, said people familiar with the matter, who asked not to be named because the details are not public.
The push would follow Turkey’s formal bid to join the Brics group of emerging market nations including China and Russia.
Turkey is hopeful that a breakthrough could encourage Chinese companies including BYD – the world’s biggest maker of electric cars – to consider producing batteries following a recent deal to make EVs in the country, the people said.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan met Chinese President Xi Jinping in Kazakhstan in early July and discussed cooperation with China in developing the metals, they added.
The Turkish Energy and Natural Resources Ministry declined to comment. China’s Ministry of Commerce did not respond to a request for comment.
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Two years ago, Turkey discovered what it described as a large reserve of rare earth elements in Beylikova near Eskisehir in central Anatolia. The Energy Ministry has said it is ready to build a refinery there to process the raw material.
“We continue our work to commission an industrial-scale facility that will make our country an important player in the global rare-earth elements supply chain,” Turkey’s Industry and Technology Minister Fatih Kacir said last month.
The country wants to be active across the supply chain from raw materials to finished EVs and batteries, he said.
Over the past three decades, China has built a dominant role in mining and especially in refining rare earths, a cluster of 17 elements used in everything from wind turbines to military hardware and electric vehicles.
China’s clout is causing growing alarm in Washington and Brussels, but efforts to bolster alternative supplies of rare earths and other critical minerals have faced a litany of challenges including technical setbacks, regulatory delays and social opposition.
Chinese manufacturers are looking for better access to the European Union, with which Turkey has a customs agreement, as the bloc starts imposing tariffs on Chinese-made EVs.
BYD has already signed a deal to build a factory in Turkey. The country has also held separate negotiations with Chery Automobile, SAIC Motor, and Great Wall Motor.
The Global Times reported at the time that the find created an opportunity for China and Turkey to cooperate.
Turkey wants to refine the compounds discovered in Beylikova into individual elements of the highest possible purity, sources said. BLOOMBERG
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