Showing posts with label Lithium metal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lithium metal. Show all posts

Tuesday, 22 February 2022

Lithium price rises to record high level

According to a report by South China Morning Post, lithium metal price in the Chinese market reached US$315,000/ton; just days after Argentinean President Alberto Fernandez signed his country up for China’s Belt and Road Initiative during a high-profile trip to Beijing this month.

The spot price has risen to this level for the first time – more than four times what it cost a year ago.

The two countries happen to be the world’s major players in the supply chain of the metal – an essential material used in electric vehicle (EV) batteries.

Argentina is located in a region with the highest concentrations of the mineral – South America’s so-called Lithium Triangle, which contains more than half of the world’s reserves.

Chinese companies are the biggest buyers and investors of lithium mines around the globe and refine two-thirds of the world’s lithium.

A vast deposit of one of the most highly coveted metals on Earth could potentially be located in the region around Mount Everest, according to Chinese scientists.

The researchers’ discovery of lithium near the world’s tallest mountain comes as global demand for the metal has been skyrocketing, sending prices to record levels and further fuelling geopolitical competition for strategic resources.

The ore deposit may contain as much as 1.0125 million tons of lithium oxide, according to the group of scientists from the Institute of Geology and Geophysics at the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS).

But it is not yet known how much the new Himalayan deposit – dubbed Qiongjiagang, after the nearest peak – could be worth.

It may also be the country’s third-largest lithium deposit after one at the Bailong Mountain site in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region, and the Jiajika deposit in Sichuan province, according to a report by China Science Daily.

The content rate of lithium oxide in the newly discovered deposit is also high enough to be of “industrial value”, according to the report.

“The Qiongjiagang lithium pegmatite deposit has good conditions for mining,” Qin Kezhang, Head of Research Team, was quoted as saying.

He pointed to the shallowness of the deposit and the quality of the ore, in noting that it would be relatively easy to mine and extract. He also said it is also in a favorable location, geographically – far from the heart of the Qomolangma nature preserve and still accessible. Qomolangma is the Tibetan name for Everest.

However, Qin said, exploitation of the lithium deposit is a long way off, as it is still in the initial “pre-study” phase.

As major economies are all aiming to shift to electric cars in the global fight against climate change, the silvery-white metal has been increasingly considered “new oil” or “white gold”, as it is an essential component in electric vehicle (EV) batteries.

According to an estimate from the International Energy Agency, global demand for lithium would grow by more than 4,000% by 2040 if the world achieves its climate goals.

Currently, 85% of lithium comes from Latin America and Australia, according to market intelligence provider IHS Markit. The two regions are home to 64% of the world’s known lithium, according to the 2022 Mineral Commodity Summary from the United States Geological Survey.

The newly discovered deposit is said to be a type of lithium-bearing rock called spodumene – the same as that from Australia – while deposits in Latin America are found in brine lakes spanning the borders of Bolivia, Argentina and Chile – known as the Lithium Triangle.

As the world’s biggest EV market, Chinese companies refine two-thirds of the world’s lithium and dominate the global battery production.

That dominance has triggered concerns among the United States and its allies, which have vowed to reduce their supply-chain dependence on China.

Meanwhile, three quarters of the mineral supply in China relies on imports. More than 96 per cent of spodumene exports from Australia go to China, IHS Markit’s data showed, while more and more Chinese companies are venturing into Latin America for mining projects.