(12 February 2020) Tesla by far and away leads in sales of electric vehicles globally and now not only has company CEO Elon Musk thrown down for a 40x increase in annual production but in doing so could escalate natural resource and geopolitical pressures. Electric vehicles (EVs) experienced record sales growth in the second half of 2020, and Musk is perfectly poised to use that momentum to scale towards his production goal of 20 million EVs per year by 2030. Aggressive production plans from Tesla and other EV manufacturers coupled with unprecedented growth of sales raises concerns, however, about the sufficiency of known metals reserves and current metals supplies.

  • Estimates from MINING.COM show that if Tesla reaches its target annual production rate, Tesla alone will consume more than 30% of current global nickel production, almost 60% of global cobalt production, over 90% of global graphite production, and 165% of global lithium production. The obvious exceptions to this outcome include changes in metals production and/or required EV manufacturing inputs.
  • Another critical unknown is the absolute reserve volume of key metals as opposed to known reserves and whether EV demand could outstrip reserves. Extrapolation of MINING.COM estimates to accommodate a fortyfold increase of global EV production from Tesla alone shows that the world would run out of nickel and cobalt. EV production requirements would require tripling known reserves of nickel and more than doubling known reserves of cobalt.

Any EV outlook needs to also account for the geopolitics of business, particularly in light of the trade tensions between the US and China in recent years. China is not only the largest EV market but also the only country that appears in every top 10 list of countries with the largest reserves and production of metals currently required for EV manufacturing. This fact implies that China's natural resource base and production capacities make it the most sustainable EV manufacturer to met Musk's production aims.

Download our latest AUTO INDUSTRY data brief

The Automotive Data Brief reviews the most recent data to present an overall picture of the automotive sector. You can find information relating to vehicle production and sales as well as statistics about fuel prices, vehicle stocks, and the electric-vehicle market.

Связанные Insights от Knoema

The Global Electric Car Market

Electric cars constitute less than 0.1 percent of the vehicle market today, but market and regulatory forces all but ensure electric vehicles will be the future of the auto industry. According to the 2016 Global Electric Vehicle Outlook from the International Energy Agency, the global electric car stock has grown rapidly since 2010, from about 2,000 cars in 2005 to nearly 1.3 million in 2015. The boom in the electric car industry is usually attributed to three factors: The increasing recovery cost globally for fossil fuels used in conventional vehicles;The environmentally-friendly...

Metals Price Rally: Five Indicators to Watch

(18 June 2021) Uneven post-covid recovery, supply shortages, and tens of trillions of dollars of economic stimulus have resulted in a price rally in commodity markets, including prices for industrial metals. The question that investors are asking today is how long the price rally will last. The short answer: We don't know. Instead of making predictions on prices, in this dashboard we have put together a set of indicators for your exploration and analysis. Several of these indicators hint at a possible future reversal in price trends. Each of the five indicators on this page...

Top Vehicle Manufacturers in the US Market, 1961-2016

Over the last three years, car sales in the US market have set new all-time records and included a collection of manufacturers that extends well beyond the American classics. In 2015, vehicle sales in the US reached nearly 17.5 million units, a growth of 5.7 percent from 2014 and 25,000 more vehicles than the record setting sales in 2005. The year 2000 marked a turning point in the US auto industry: it was the last year that General Motors and Ford Motor Company combined made up at least 50 percent of the US market share. GM’s share of the US market has decreased almost 3 times...

The World's Top Car-Owning Countries

The United States is often criticized for its perceived nonchalance toward air pollution despite persistent statements to the contrary by the current presidential administration. The US remains the number one contributor globally to harmful chemicals in the air, with the fossil-fuel consuming transportation industry being a primary emission source. With more than 250 million vehicles on US roads, the US surpasses even China based on total vehicles in use despite China's much larger population...at least for now. China has already surpassed the US in annual new car sales. Examining...