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Syrah Resource, a company in Australia, gets Tesla a reprieve on a graphite deal

The Australian miner Syrah said that on Wednesday it had agreed with Tesla to extend a deadline for addressing an alleged breach in their crucial graphite agreement. This will give the miner valuable time to salvage the deal, which is vital to its U.S. growth.

Tesla, led by Elon Musk, issued a default notification in July when Syrah failed to deliver active anode samples that were conformant from its Louisiana facility processing Tesla's EV Batteries. The original deadline of September 16 has been moved to November 15

The company said that while Syrah did not admit it was in breach of the offtake contract, the parties had extended the cure date until 15 November 2025. Both sides were working together to resolve the dispute.

The 2021 Tesla contract is worth 8,000 tonnes per year for a period of four years. It supports Syrah Louisiana Vidalia's Louisiana Vidalia plant and its strategy to become America’s first non-Chinese major graphite provider.

The facility is the only large-scale, vertically integrated anode material manufacturer outside of China. This will help reduce U.S. dependency on Chinese supplies, which currently dominate the industry.

The extension provides temporary relief for Syrah as it battles to establish its position in the strategic batteries materials sector amid intensifying U.S. - China trade tensions.

Tesla could terminate the agreement if Syrah fails to qualify its anode materials at Vidalia by February 9, 2026.

(source: Reuters)