We need it for cellphones, electric cars and just about every long-life battery gadget we use: Lithium is a key ingredient of the modern economy, but new mining concessions can be hard to find.
Except, that is, in Argentina, where a lithium rush is in full swing.
Argentina, Chile and Bolivia hold 70 percent of the world’s reserves of the soft, silvery metal.
However, Chile is not currently granting new concessions and Bolivia has suspended lithium mining after opposition from local residents around the Salar de Uyuni salt flats, which hold enormous lithium deposits.
“Argentina has, in the provinces of Catamarca, Salta and Jujuy, the most fantastic quantity and quality of lithium the world can boast today,” Argentine Secretary of Mining Jorge Mayoral said.
“It’s a mineral Argentina is betting heavily on. Argentina sits on resources that may surpass 128 million tonnes of lithium carbonate, which is a vital component in manufacturing lithium batteries,” he said.
At the foot of the Andes, in the windswept region of Puna, the salares, or salt flats, hold vast deposits of lithium.
The world last year consumed 170,000 tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent. US, Japanese and South Korean companies are already mining Argentina’s deposits.
“When we started promoting lithium in 2005, we never imagined we would have such success in attracting investment to Argentina... All the big automakers have been present in Argentina trying to get a foot in lithium development,” Mayoral said.
Japan’s Toyota Motor Corp and Mitsubishi Group and South Korea’s Posco have already begun production in the province of Jujuy, on the border with Chile and Bolivia — the so-called “golden triangle” of lithium.
In 2013, French group Eramet also got in the game with two deposits in Salta Province covering 500km2.
“It’s a beautiful deposit. We discovered a significant level of resources — more than 7 million tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent,” Eramet’s Hughes-Marie Aulanier said.
Eramet has not yet entered the production phase — expected to last more than 40 years — but its geologists are busy assessing how much of the deposit is commercially viable.
Aulanier said the firm would use an innovative, “world-first” procedure to avoid harming the environment, developed by Eramet’s research department with the French Institute for Oil and New Energies.
Thirty to 40 French and Argentine employees are at work on the site, with just llamas and vicunas for company in an unpopulated desert region at an altitude of 4,000m.
The nearest village, Santa Rosa Grandes, is 60km away.
Eramet, which has partnered with the province’s public mining company on the project, plans to invest US$260 million once the feasibility study gives the green light.
It expects output of 20,000 tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent a year through 2019.
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