From Mary Sagatelova <[email protected]>
Subject On the Grid: Fueling it Forward
Date January 20, 2023 10:23 PM
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
  Links have been removed from this email. Learn more in the FAQ.
The American auto industry is charging up for an electrifying new chapter.

View this email in your browser

[link removed]

[link removed]

Hi John,

The American auto industry is charging up for an electrifying new chapter, defined by the Biden Administration’s ambitious goal

[link removed]

to cut all greenhouse gas emissions from our transportation sector by 2050. But putting this into practice is complex. Public perception is still evolving and funding needs to be secured to make the transition.

Electric vehicle (EV) sales were up 65%

[link removed]

in 2022–A BIG DEAL–but we still have a lot of work ahead of us to make sure we can fend off financial, political, and operational challenges as we hit the accelerator on EV deployment. With the Auto Show in Washington, this week’s On the Grid will highlight the progress we’ve made and outline some hurdles we’re still facing down the road.

Navigating an emerging–and expensive–market has left the American auto industry strapped for cash. Here’s a short list of companies that are struggling:

Shell Oil announced

[link removed]

it is acquiring Volta, a promising US charging infrastructure company.

Arcimoto

[link removed]

signaled it is on the brink of bankruptcy due to insufficient funding.

Arrival

[link removed]

, a UK E-van company that is building a new plant in South Carolina and has pre-orders from UPS, is short on cash and is closing its UK manufacturing facility to refocus on the American market.

Britishvolt

[link removed]

, a UK battery start-up, filed for bankruptcy after failing to raise the equity needed to build a factory.

EV companies face higher debt and equity cost of capital, making it harder for them to take advantage of Inflation Reduction Act provisions if they don’t come up with more cost-effective sources of cash. And EVs are not the only clean technology facing peril.

Unless financing can carry the day during rate cycle periods, like the one we are in right now, there will be setbacks in the acceleration of the clean energy transition. And ongoing inflation and higher interest rates mean public dollars don’t stretch as far. What is the solution here? Public financing teams across the government–from ARPA-E to the Treasury to the Development Finance Corporation–need to build a collective roadmap that will boost rates of investment, set achievable targets, and enable a rapid shift to clean energy.

This week kicked off the DC Auto Show

[link removed]

, and EVs took center stage. Third Way’s Climate and Energy Team joined a circuit of government, industry, and media officials for Public Policy Day,

[link removed]

highlighting steps the public and private sectors have taken to advance EV adoption.

Resident Economist and Senior Resident Fellow, Dr. Ellen Hughes-Cromwick

[link removed]

, moderated a fireside chat with Gabe Klein

[link removed]

, Executive Director leading the Joint Office of Energy and Transportation, and Andrew Mayock

[link removed]

, Federal Chief Sustainability Office in the White House, discussing actions the Biden Administration has taken the last two years to drive demand for EVs and the bottlenecks left to overcome.

Senior Policy Advisor for Transportation, Alex Laska

[link removed]

, joined a conversation with Dr. Betsey Stevenson

[link removed]

, Professor of Economics at the University of Michigan, and Omar Vargas, Vice President &amp; Head of Global Public Policy at General Motors. The discussion, moderated by the Washington Post’s Shannon Osaka,

[link removed]

touched on US competitiveness in the EV supply chain, the potential for American businesses to capitalize on an existing competitive advantage

[link removed]

, and the immense economic benefits of deploying EVs.

[link removed]

Senior Policy Advisor for Transportation Alex Laska (left) and Senior Resident Fellow, Dr. Ellen Hughes-Cromwick (right).

LG Energy Solution and Honda Motor announced

[link removed]

a joint venture to invest $3.5 billion in a new EV battery factory in Jeffersonville, Ohio, creating 2,200 jobs and bringing key supply chains to the United States. Following the passage of the Inflation Reduction Act, the push for electrification pivoted toward a focus on domestic sourcing and manufacturing. The partnership between LG Energy and Honda stands as one of many examples of automakers’ racing to align their production processes with provisions and requirements in the Inflation Reduction Act.

Emily Pontecorvo,

[link removed]

in Grist, paints a stark picture of the labor shortage jeopardizing the clean energy transition and the unique opportunity we have to build and sustain good-paying and high-demand jobs.

Michael Bloomberg,

[link removed]

in Bloomberg, outlines how holiday blackouts, highly visible events experienced by many this winter, can be leveraged to strengthen our electrical grid through secure and reliable clean energy. .

Jigar Shah, Katherine Hamilton, and Stephen Lacy,

[link removed]

on the Carbon Copy, podcast series, discuss the challenges ahead for deploying the Inflation Reduction Act’s nearly $370 billion of clean energy investments.

The clean energy policy conversation is expanding…and so are we! The Climate and Energy Program is looking for people with talent and a passion for climate solutions to fill two new roles on our team. If you’ve got anyone in your mental Rolodex who you think might be a fit, please send them our way. And if you wanted to circulate these job postings more broadly with your networks, we wouldn’t mind that either!

Deputy Director for Development

[link removed]

: This person will cultivate and steward relationships with individual and philanthropic donors as well as set and oversee the execution of the development strategy for the Climate &amp; Energy Program to maintain and grow our individual donors and foundation fundraising, working with the Senior Vice President for Climate, Third Way’s development, and the Climate policy and Communications teams. This person will oversee the Development Advisor, who manages institutional philanthropic giving and grant accounts manager’s fulfillment of all relevant grants. Our ideal candidate will have 5+ years of energy policy experience and experience managing staff.

The Climate and Energy Program

[link removed]

navigated a set of conversations at the DC Auto Show’s Public Policy Day, check out the highlights

[link removed]

.

[link removed]

[link removed]

Let’s keep the conversation going,

Mary Sagatelova

Communications and Content Advisor | Third Way

216.394.7615 :: @MarySagatelova

[link removed]



Did someone forward you this email? Sign up to receive The Grid in your inbox HERE

[link removed]

.

Copyright © 2023 Third Way. All rights reserved.

Want to change how you receive these emails? You can update your preferences.

[link removed]
Screenshot of the email generated on import

Message Analysis

  • Sender: Third Way
  • Political Party: n/a
  • Country: United States
  • State/Locality: n/a
  • Office: n/a
  • Email Providers:
    • Pardot
    • Litmus