The agreement tasks the engineering team with coordinating the equipment interface and production flow essential for manufacturing Active Anode Materials. CEO Anthony Huston stated that bringing on specialized integration experts reduces development risk and allows the company to scale operations efficiently as demand for American-sourced graphite rises. Graphite represents roughly 95% of the anode in modern lithium-ion batteries, placing the Ohio site at the center of the company’s push to diminish reliance on foreign imports.
This project remains contingent on securing project financing, a hurdle the company continues to navigate alongside its mining development at the Graphite Creek deposit in Alaska. By linking Alaskan raw materials to Ohio-based processing, the firm aims to establish a circular economy that includes potential recycling capabilities. While the United States currently relies entirely on imports for natural graphite, Graphite One intends to leverage the Alaska site—the largest deposit in the country—to anchor its domestic production strategy.

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