Rubio demands Biden investigate Ford’s deal with Chinese battery maker

Washington — Sen. Marco Rubio, R-Florida, is asking the Biden administration to investigate Ford Motor Co.’s plans to build a $3.5 billion battery plant in Marshall and to withhold any federal aid that may benefit the Chinese company it is licensing technology from.

Florida Sen. Marco Rubio wants the Biden administration to withhold federal aid for Ford Motor Co.'s planned battery plant in Michigan, citing its planned use of technology from a Chinese company.

It is the latest reflection of how ongoing political and economic tension between the United States and China has introduced new challenges for automakers seeking to ramp up electric vehicle production in a global battery supply chain dominated by China.

Ford will own and operate the recently-announced plant, which is expected to come online in 2026 and build lithium iron phosphate batteries for the automaker’s electric vehicles. But the battery cell technology will be licensed from Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Ltd., or CATL, which is based in China and is the world’s leading EV battery maker.

Rubio wrote a letter to the U.S. Departments of Treasury, Energy and Transportation on Monday requesting a review of the plan by the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States, an interagency group that reviews foreign investment in the United States for potential national security risks.

He also demanded that no federal funds “go to enrich (People’s Republic of China) champion CATL, or any other Beijing-supported company, directly or indirectly.”

That should especially apply to funding and tax credits from the Inflation Reduction Act, he added, which includes billions in federal subsidies for domestic battery manufacturing. Ford said earlier this week that the subsidies were a major part of why the Dearborn automaker chose the United States rather than Mexico or Canada for the project.

“The exact structure of this arrangement has yet to be reported, but policymakers should be clear-eyed about one takeaway: if Chinese companies like CATL are able to exploit both Chinese and United States incentives for battery and EV technology through clever corporate arrangements, then there is no use in investing federal funds toward industrial development in the first place,” Rubio wrote. “Taxpayer dollars should never be used to support PRC champions.”