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Syrah Resources, based in Australia, buys time to complete the Tesla graphite deal

Syrah, an Australian company that supplies graphite to Tesla, announced on Monday that it had agreed to extend a deadline for a third time to resolve a dispute over a supposed breach of the agreement.

The 2021 agreement, which will supply?8,000 metric tons of graphite per year for four years, is crucial to Syrah Vidalia's Louisiana operations as well as the company's plan to become the United States' first non-Chinese major supplier of this metal.

Tesla, headquartered in Texas, issued the first default notice to Syrah in July 2025. The company claimed that Syrah failed to deliver active anode samples conforming with its Vidalia facility for use in electric-vehicle battery.

The U.S. Department of Energy must approve the extension of the deadline.

The original deadline of September 16 was extended to November 15, then pushed back to January 16.

The Australian miner stated that "While Syrah doesn't accept it is in breach of the offtake contract, the parties have extended to March 16, 2026 the cure date and are working closely together?to cure this alleged default".

Vidalia is the only large-scale, vertically integrated anode material manufacturer outside of China. It offers an alternative to the Chinese suppliers that dominate the market.

Tesla, headed by Elon Musk, the richest man in the world, retains the right to cancel the deal if the active anode supplied by Syrah fails to meet the technical specifications before February 9.

The graphite producer's shares fell 6.6% in the early trading on Monday to A$0.285, their lowest level since the 22nd of December. Meanwhile, the mining sub-index rose 0.6%. (Reporting by Shruti Agarwal in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu)

(source: Reuters)