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Could A Lithium Shortage De-Rail The Electric Car
Boom?
By James Stafford
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, August 30, 2016
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We've gone electric, and there's no going back at this point.
Lithium is our new fuel, but like fossil fuels, the reserves we're
currently tapping into are finite—and that's what investors can take to
the bank.
You may think lithium got too popular too fast. You may
suspect electric vehicles are too much buzz and not enough real future.
You may, in short, be a lithium skeptic, one of many. And yet, despite
this skepticism, lithium demand is rising steadily and sharply, and
indications that a shortage may be looming are very real.
It won't
be a shortage in terms of ‘peak lithium'; rather, it will be a game of
catch-up with the electric car boom, with miners hustling to explore and
tap into new reserves.
Consider the number of battery
gigafactories that are being built around the world. We have all heard
about Tesla's (NYSE:
TSLA) Nevada facility
that will at full capacity
produce
enough batteries to power 500,000 electric cars per year by 2020.
This, as the carmaker proudly notes, is more than the global total
lithium ion battery production for 2013. That's a pretty impressive rate
of demand growth over just three years—but this growth also represents the
culmination of a sea change in the way we think.
Lithium is
powering pretty much everything upon which our present depends on and our
future is being built. It's a viable alternative to petrol and in consumer
electronics market segment alone, there is no sign of contraction—only
expansion. Think the Internet of things, or smart houses, or smart cities,
eventually. All these fascinating ideas are powered in some way by
lithium.
But the real and present coup has been launched by
electric vehicles. Forecasts from market research firms seem to be
unanimous: EVs are on the rise, EVs are hot, and EVs will be increasingly
in demand as people all over the world are eagerly encouraged to cut their
carbon footprint. According to
Lux Research, the EV market will grow to $10 billion within the next
four years.
Navigant Research forecasts EV sales will rise from 2.6 million last
year to more than 6 million in 2024. So, whether we like it or not, EVs
are coming—and in force.
Indeed, says Nevada Energy Metals (TSX-V:BFF)
executive Malcolm Bell, “It may be time to start worrying about a
shortage, but it's not a question of whether we have enough lithium—it's a
question of tapping into new reserves. Those who don't see the supply wall
looming, will hit with a resounding thud. Those who start tapping into new
reserves will be extremely well-positioned for the future.”
From
where everyone is standing right now, it may seem that the world's got a
fair amount of lithium. According to global estimates by the
U.S. Geological Survey, there is enough lithium in the world – 13.5
million metric tons of it – to last us over 350 years in batteries.
What's missing from this prediction, however, is … the future, and
indeed, the present. This calculation takes into account only the current
rate of lithium ion battery usage. It does not account for the entrance of
EVs into the mainstream. It does not account for Tesla, not to mention the
growing ranks of Tesla rivals. And it most certainly doesn't account for
what is by all means a pending energy revolution that sees lithium as its
leader.
Already, the present is clear:
Demand is growing fast, faster than production, and for now this new
demand is coming increasingly from the electric vehicle industry.
Tesla's is by no means the only battery gigafactory out there. There are
others being built around the world (at
least 12, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence) and these
gigafactories will raise the global demand for lithium batteries to some
122 GWh by 2020. That's up from 35 GWh currently. It's a phenomenal
rise over a very short period of time.
In the U.S., there is
already one gigafactory—Tesla's, in Nevada—operating. A second gigafactory
is in the works, courtesy of
LG Chem. Brine-based lithium production in the country is concentrated
in one place only, at least for now, and this place is Nevada. That's
because it is the only confirmed place with lithium deposits. The biggest
actively mined area is the Clayton Valley, with presence from both mining
majors like Albermarle (NYSE:
ALB) and smaller, pure-play lithium miners such as Nevada Energy
Metals. This makes Clayton Valley ground zero for the U.S. lithium rush
and everyone wants to be there, but it's the pure play miners who are set
to explode onto this scene from an investors' perspective.
Clayton
Valley can hardly contain the lithium rush, and it is already time to
look in the surrounding areas to secure future supply for soaring demand
predictions. Those with enough foresight are diversifying their Nevada
holdings and banking on geological clues that suggest there's plenty more
lithium in Tesla's backyard, and whoever gets to it first will be far
ahead of the game.
“When everyone starts paying attention to
Nevada's geology, we'll see a land rush that makes the current one pale by
comparison,” says Bell, who heads of acquisitions for
Nevada Energy Metals,
one of the pure play movers in this playing field that sees the wider
lithium potential in Nevada.
“Nevada's geothermal footprints are
large and extend well beyond the Clayton Valley. If you put a mirror up to
Clayton Valley, there is endless opportunity here. The real race here is
to create the next U.S. lithium powerhouse,” says Bell.
How to
Play Lithium
Look everywhere, and then look again. Securing an
investment in Clayton Valley is a good place to start—but it's also
potentially only a flash in the pan. The best way to secure a foothold in
lithium right now is to think outside the box and look for those companies
who see the bigger picture but are also smart enough to keep one foot in
the proven lithium hunting grounds.
But you also have to
understand the supply and demand picture here.
Macquarie Research estimates that in 2015 demand for lithium already
exceeded supply, while this year, lithium output will again fall short of
demand.
In 2017, thanks to so much new production capacity the
metal's fundamentals will near an equilibrium, which will last for about a
year before deficit rears its head once again—but this time the deficit
will stick. Despite new efforts to ramp up supply, it will take a while
before supply corresponds to the demand.
The future is pretty
clear: We're looking at a period of shortage, and shortage is where the
savvy investors make real money. The lithium feeding frenzy has only just
begun. Consumer electronics keeps it safe and steady, as always; the
electric vehicle boom skews the demand picture dramatically, and the
future's energy storage and powerwall evolutions take it over the edge.
The reserves are there, and there's geologists estimate there's
plenty of unproven reserves out there as well—it's just a matter of who
finds them first, and who starts extracting first.
Lithium has the
purest of fundamentals of any ‘commodity' out there, and the next oil
barons look set to actually be lithium barons. In fact, in this respect,
electric vehicles will likely be the cause of the
next oil
crisis. Demand and supply are simple and shockingly visible, and that
means there's a lot of new money floating around for lithium exploration.
If you're not a believer, the immediate future will sweep you off of your
feet.
Link to original article:
http://oilprice.com/Energy/Energy-General/Could-A-Lithium-Shortage-De-Rail-The-Electric-Car-Boom.html
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