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France backs nickel refinery task to reinforce battery supply chain

The French federal government on Monday promoted a private sector plan to establish a nickel and cobalt refinery near Bordeaux to reinforce the nation's supply chain for electrical vehicle batteries and minimize its dependence on China.

The 300 million euro ($ 323.49 million) task from Swiss-based KL1, provided as part of President Emmanuel Macron's yearly Select France investment occasion on Monday, objectives to process 20,000 metric lots of nickel and 1,500 lots of cobalt each year from 2028 in a port zone on France's Atlantic coast.

The project, called Electro Movement Materials Europe ( EMME), aims to cover 20-30% of France's nickel and cobalt requirements for electrical cars by 2030.

France and other European countries have actually been investing in gigafactories to produce batteries and establishing mines for minerals like lithium. However capability to procedure metals into high-purity materials suitable for batteries continues to be dominated by Chinese companies.

This will permit us to fill a space in the value chain, French Financing Minister Bruno Le Maire said of the task throughout a weekend call with press reporters.

The task, which is going through public consultation and administrative approval phases, could take advantage of a green industry tax credit worth around 20% of the financial investment expense, the finance ministry added.

France has a large nickel mining industry in its South Pacific territory of New Caledonia and KL1 is headed by Antonin Beurrier, a previous CEO of New Caledonian nickel producer Prony Resources.

Nevertheless, a financing ministry spokesperson stated it had not been chosen yet where the nickel and cobalt would be sourced from for the planned refinery.

The French government has actually been working out a rescue bundle for the loss-making New Caledonian nickel sector, including a. commitment to supply Europe's battery supply chain, though talks. have stalled amid political stress in between pro-independence. and loyalist celebrations.

(source: Reuters)