Electric vehicles are a big part of the green energy transition but some of their most critical components are made using rare-earth elements. These can be highly toxic and environmentally destructive to mine and refine, with politically-complicated supply chains to boot. Engineers and automakers like Tesla, GM and Stellantis are now racing to build motors that don’t require magnets made from rare earths, but they must figure out how to match the efficiency. WSJ mining and commodities reporter Rhiannon Hoyle speaks with host Danny Lewis about why countries and companies are finding alternatives to rare earths. Plus, Oak Ridge National Laboratory engineer Burak Ozpineci tells us where new motors could take the EV industry.



What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: FOEPodcast@wsj.com 



Sign up for the WSJ's free The Future of Everything newsletter. 



Further reading: 

For EV Startups, Things Are Going From Bad to Worse 

Rare-Earth Prices Are in the Doldrums. China Wants to Keep Them That Way. 

Lynas Bets on New Rare Earths Products, Breaking China Stranglehold 



Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

WSJ’s The Future of Everything

The Wall Street Journal

How New Motors Could Transform the EV Industry

DEC 13, 202416 MIN
WSJ’s The Future of Everything

How New Motors Could Transform the EV Industry

DEC 13, 202416 MIN

Description

Electric vehicles are a big part of the green energy transition but some of their most critical components are made using rare-earth elements. These can be highly toxic and environmentally destructive to mine and refine, with politically-complicated supply chains to boot. Engineers and automakers like Tesla, GM and Stellantis are now racing to build motors that don’t require magnets made from rare earths, but they must figure out how to match the efficiency. WSJ mining and commodities reporter Rhiannon Hoyle speaks with host Danny Lewis about why countries and companies are finding alternatives to rare earths. Plus, Oak Ridge National Laboratory engineer Burak Ozpineci tells us where new motors could take the EV industry.


What do you think about the show? Let us know on Apple Podcasts or Spotify, or email us: [email protected] 


Sign up for the WSJ's free The Future of Everything newsletter


Further reading:

For EV Startups, Things Are Going From Bad to Worse 

Rare-Earth Prices Are in the Doldrums. China Wants to Keep Them That Way. 

Lynas Bets on New Rare Earths Products, Breaking China Stranglehold 


Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices