Al-Jazeerah History
Archives
Mission & Name
Conflict Terminology
Editorials
Gaza Holocaust
Gulf War
Isdood
Islam
News
News Photos
Opinion
Editorials
US Foreign Policy (Dr. El-Najjar's Articles)
www.aljazeerah.info
|
|
Lithium Market Set To Explode, All Eyes Are On
Nevada
By By James Stafford
Oil Price,
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, October 12, 2015
|
|
Lithium mining |
|
While other commodities are floundering or completely
collapsing in this market, lithium—the critical mineral in the emerging
battery gigafactory war—is poised to explode, and going forward Nevada is
emerging as the front line in this pending American lithium boom.
Most of the world’s lithium comes from Argentina, Chile, Bolivia,
Australia and China, but American resources being developed by new
entrants into this market have set up the state of Nevada to become the
key venue and proving ground for game-changing trade in this everyday
mineral. Nevada is about to get a boost first from Tesla’s (NASDAQ:TSLA)
upcoming battery gigafactory, and then from all of its rivals.
For
several years, experts have been predicting a lithium revolution, and
while investors were being coy at first, the reality of the battery
gigafactories is now clear, and nothing has hit this home more poignantly
than Tesla’s recent supply agreements with lithium providers who will be
the first beneficiaries of this boom, followed by a second round of
lithium brine developers that are climbing quickly to the forefront.
As Jeb
Handwerger—founder of Gold Stock Trades—recently told the Resource
Investor: “This is just the beginning. We're in the early stages of a
revolution in powering transportation and homes. This really is disruptive
technology. Annual growth in the battery space could be around 20 percent,
which means that demand could double every five years. These batteries
make smartphones, laptops, tablets, electric cars and even solar energy
practical.”
Tesla—which will require large quantities of lithium at
cheaper prices--has already signed agreements to purchase lithium from
Canadian Bacanora
Minerals Ltd and British Rare Earth Minerals Plc. in Mexico but has
indicated that it is looking closer to home, and particularly in Nevada,
which is ground zero for Tesla’s battery units.
For Nevada, there
can be no more significant validation than Tesla’s lithium supply
agreements. Albemarle Corp. already has the producing Rockwood mine, but
Tesla and other gigafactory contenders are concerned about new lithium
resources.
And the newest entrant on this scene—Dajin
Resources Corp - has two projects in Nevada, only a short distance
from Albemarle’s Rockwood producing mine and in close proximity to Pure
Energy Mineral’s lithium development project, which just signed a
preliminary supply agreement
with Tesla.
Focused on the exploration of energy metal
projects, Dajin has strategically located targets in Nevada, including
over 3,800 acres in Alkali Lake,
which is only 12 kilometers from the producing Rockwood Lithium Mine. It
also has the Teels Marsh project,
which covers over 3,000 acres in the Mineral County desert lake basin
and is about 80 kilometers away from producing mines and new exploration
targets that are all on the site of a volcanic eruption that many believe
could have contributed lithium.
Where future supplies are
concerned, investors will be looking closely at Dajin, which is 100%
self-owned and operated. If it can post similar success in terms of
exploring lithium brine, it could easily pop up as a favorite stock on
investors’ radar.
And the brine is the place to be, putting Nevada
at the front line of the North American lithium revolution at a time when
other minerals are collapsing. The lithium, found in salty water, or
brines, is the most cost-effective on the market; it’s cheap and easy to
extract, giving competing battery gigafactories new, affordable American
lithium resources that will be a global game-changer.
At the end of
the day, Nevada has enough lithium brine to earn it a place among the key
global venues—a list that for now includes the “Lithium Triangle” of
Bolivia, Argentina and Chile, as well as China.
When it comes to
lithium, “it’s all just talk if you don’t have an aquifer and a closed
deep basin containing lithium,” says Dajin CEO Brian Findlay. “There
aren’t many American properties out there like ours.”
Without
lithium, there will be no battery gigafactories. In fact, one of these
factories alone will need 15,000
tons of lithium carbonate a year just to get started—and the first is
slated to come online as soon as next year.
Construction has
already started on Tesla’s battery factory, where the assembly lines are
expected to churn out enough lithium-ion batteries for 500,000 electric
cars, according to Fortune
magazine, and it should be operating at full capacity by 2020.
And the Tesla gigafactory is just the tip of this overall iceberg.
According to a report from
the Centre for Solar Energy and Hydrogen
Research, more than one million electric vehicles will be on the road
globally by the end of this year—that means a spike in lithium demand,
which Roskill
consulting and research predicts will more than double from 2012 to
2017.
Even more than hybrid cars, grid storage and the ‘powerwall’
will drive lithium demand through the roof. In
an interview with Reuters, General Electric said it expected this
sector to quadruple to $6 billion by 2020 thanks to rising demand for
industrial battery systems driven by increasing reliance on intermittent
energy sources, such as wind and solar power, as well as the potential to
add energy to the grid quickly when power needs spike.
Now the game
is all about new resources—and specifically, American resources, with all
eyes on the brine. Tesla knows this, and so do its competitors. Investors
who know this will get in on the game before these new entrants start
producing.
Article Source:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Lithium-Market-Set-To-Explode-All-Eyes-Are-On-Nevada.html
***
Share this article with your facebook friends
|
|
|