Biden Admin Gives $200M Taxpayer-Funder Grant to China-Based Battery Company

Democrat President Joe Biden’s administration has given a $200 million taxpayer-funded grant to a battery company that mainly operates in China.

Biden’s Department of Energy (DOE) is touting the massive grant as a boost to meeting green agenda goals.

The DOE claims the $200M grant it gave to a lithium battery company will help the United States grow its domestic sources of green energy.

However, the company’s operations are “primarily” based in China, according to a report.

While the company, Microvast, is based in Texas, virtually none of its operations are in the U.S., according to the Washington Free Beacon.

Still, Microvast received millions of tax dollars in grant money provided by the U.S. government from the so-called “Bipartisan” Infrastructure Law to help shift the county to green energy.

When the grants were announced in October, Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm touted the investment in “American-made” products.

“This is truly a remarkable time for manufacturing in America, as President Biden’s Agenda and historic investments supercharge the private sector to ensure our clean energy future is American-made,” Granholm said at the time.

“Producing advanced batteries and components here at home will accelerate the transition away from fossil fuels to meet the strong demand for electric vehicles, creating more good-paying jobs across the country.”

Additionally, in the grant’s announcement, the DOE touted that Microvast is a “majority U.S.-owned company, traded on NASDAQ” that is “headquartered in Stafford, Texas,” with additional locations in Tennessee, Florida, and Colorado.

However, the Free Beacon explains that financial records prove that the company primarily works out of China:

[F]inancial records show the company operates primarily out of China.

Microvast itself says the Chinese government “exerts substantial influence over the manner in which we must conduct our business activities and may intervene, at any time and with no notice.”

The company was also recently added to a Securities and Exchange Commission watchlist of Chinese companies that are on track to be delisted from NASDAQ for failing to comply with U.S. auditing requirements.

The report also notes that the so-called “Bipartisan” Infrastructure Law states that the Department of Energy should avoid using the grants money to fund any project that “use battery material supplied by or originating from a foreign entity of concern,” including companies “subject to the jurisdiction or direction” of China.

Moreover, the Free Beacon wrote that Microvast describes itself in its 2021 annual SEC report as a “holding company” that conducts its business “principally through our subsidiary in China.”

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“A substantial portion of our operations and manufacturing and most of our current customers are in the [People’s Republic of China],” Microvast added in its SEC report, according to the Free Beacon.

The report also explains that it previously received subsidies from the Chinese government in addition to noting that most of its customers are associated with “state-owned companies in the PRC.”

Furthermore, the SEC, in May, added the lithium battery company to a list of companies that do not satisfy U.S. auditing requirements under the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act, as the Free Beacon noted:

In May, the SEC added Microvast to a list of Chinese companies that aren’t in compliance with U.S. auditing requirements under the Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act.

The law, which went into effect last spring, is designed to prevent Chinese companies listed on the U.S. stock exchanges from using non-approved China-based auditors to obscure their finances.

Companies that remain on the list for three consecutive years will be delisted from NASDAQ.

They are also required to disclose whether they have any directors who are members of the Chinese Communist Party, or CCP ownership.

The Free Beacon revealed that Microvast CEO Yang Wu is a U.S. citizen, according to Microvast spokeswoman Sarah Alexander.

Still, Arthur Wong, another director at the company, is a Hong Kong citizen based in Beijing and is the chairman of the audit committee at Daqo New Energy Corporation — where a subsidiary of that company, according to the report.

Wong was previously sanctioned by the Biden administration for having connections to slave labor.

Alexander noted that one of Microvast’s directors is a member of the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and that the company primarily operates out of Huzhou, China.

The company’s website says it has a “Manufacturing Facility and R&D Center” in Huzhou.

Regarding the SEC’s compliance list, the spokeswoman said that it could change due to  “recent developments on the [Holding Foreign Companies Accountable Act], including an agreement between the U.S. and Chinese governments to allow for” complete inspections.

Recently, “U.S. and Chinese regulatory officials are in talks to settle a long-running dispute over the auditing compliance of U.S.-listed Chinese firms,” Reuters reported.

However, Biden’s energy secretary is no stranger to controversy regarding taxpayer-funded government grants in the green energy sector.

During Granholm’s two terms as Michigan governor, pushing for electric vehicles was “a major focus” of hers.

Michigan Capitol Confidential notes that the green agenda was something “which she pursued by selecting particular businesses and industries to back with state taxpayer support.”

When she was governor, Granholm approved billions of dollars in state-approved tax credits for her chosen companies.

Still, Michigan Capitol Confidential notes that “every single one fell far short of the job projections hailed by the Granholm administration in press releases.

“And a good number of the companies went bankrupt.”

The most notorious of Granholm’s state-backed grant failures was the Michigan-based electric battery company A123 Systems.

Granholm’s administration granted the company $141 million in state credits and subsidies in conjunction with a $249 million federal stimulus grant from the Obama administration to develop lithium-ion battery technology for plug-in hybrid electric vehicles.

Despite this massive government investment, A123 Systems filed for bankruptcy in October 2012.

And then in 2013, the Obama-Biden administration approved the sale of A123 Systems to a Chinese company, thereby allowing China to acquire all of the U.S. taxpayer-funded electric battery research developed by the Michigan company.

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By Frank Bergman

Frank Bergman is a political/economic journalist living on the east coast. Aside from news reporting, Bergman also conducts interviews with researchers and material experts and investigates influential individuals and organizations in the sociopolitical world.

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