By F. William Engdahl
18 November 2019
Image credits: Smnt License: This file is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-Share Alike 4.0 International license with some rights reserved https://bit.ly/330t1jw
For several years since the
global push to develop mass-scale Electric Vehicles, the element Lithium has
come intofocus as a strategic metal. Demand is enormous in China, in the EU and
in the USA at present, and securing control over lithium supplies is already
developing its own geopolitics not unlike that for the control of oil .
China Moves to Secure
Sources
For China, which has set
major targets to become the world’s largest producer of EVs, developing lithium
battery materials is a priority for the 13th Five-Year Plan (2016-20) period.
Though China has its own lithium reserves, recovery is limited, and China has
gone to secure lithium mining rights abroad.
In Australia Chinese company
Talison Lithium, controlled by Tianqi, mines and owns the world’s largest and
highest grade spodumene reserves in Greenbushes, Western Australia near Perth.
Talison Lithium Inc. is the
world’s largest primary lithium producer. Their Greenbushes site in Australia
produces today some 75% of China’s lithium demands and about forty percent of
world demand. This as well as other vital Australian raw materials,
has made relations with Australia, traditionally a firm US ally, of strategic
importance to Beijing. As well, China has become the largest trade partner for
Australia.
However China’s growing
economic influence in the Pacific around Australia led Prime Minister Scott
Morrison to send a warning message to China not to challenge Australia’s
strategic backyard
region. In
late 2017 Australia, with growing concern over expanding Chinese influence in
the region, resumed informal cooperation in what is sometimes called the
Quad,with USA, India and Japan, reviving an earlier attempt to check Chinese
influence in the South Pacific. Australia has also recently stepped up lending
to strategic Pacific island nations to counter China’s lending. All this clearly makes it imperative for China to go
global to other sites to secure its lithium in order to become the key player
in the emerging EV economy over the coming decade.
As development of electric
vehicles became priority in Chinese economic planning, the search for secure
lithium turned to Chile,another major source of the lithium. There,China’s
Tianqiis amassing a major share of Chile’s Sociedad Quimica Y Minera (SQM), one
of the world’s largest lithium producers. If China’s Tianqi succeeds in gaining
control of SQM it will change the geopolitics of world lithium control
according to mining industry reports.
The global supply of lithium
metals, a strategic component of lithium-ion batteries used to power electric
vehicles (EVs) is concentrated in a very few countries.
To give an idea of lithium’s
potential demand, the battery for Tesla’s Model S requires 63 kilograms of
lithium carbonate, enough to power approximately 10,000 cell phone batteries.
In a recent report, the Goldman Sachs bank has called lithium carbonate the new
gasoline. Only a 1 per cent increase in electric vehicle production could
increase lithium demand by more than 40 per cent of current global production,
according to Goldman Sachs. With many governments demanding lower CO2 emission,
the global auto industry is expanding plans for EVs massively over the coming
decade, which will make lithium potentially as strategic as oil is today.
Saudi Arabia of Lithium?
Bolivia, whose lithium is
far more complicated to extract, has alsoin recent years become a target of
interest for Beijing. Some geological estimates rank Bolivia’s lithium reserves
as the world’s largest.Salar de Uyuni salt flats alone are estimated to contain
nine million tons of lithium .
Since 2015 a Chinese mining
company, CAMC Engineering Company, has been operating a large plant in Bolivia
to produce potassium chloride as fertilizer. What CAMC downplays is the fact
that beneath the potassium chloride are the largest known lithium reserves in
the world in Salar de Uyuni salt flats, one of 22 such salt flats in Bolivia.
China’s Linyi Dake Trade in 2014 constructed a lithium battery pilot plant on
the same site.
Then in February 2019 the
Morales government signed another lithium deal, this with China’s Xinjiang TBEA
Group Co Ltd who will hold a 49 percent stake in a planned joint venture with
Bolivia’s state lithium company YLB. That deal is to produce lithium and other
materials from the Coipasa and PastosGrandes salt flats and would cost an estimated $2.3
billion.
In terms of lithium, China
so far dominates the global new Great Game for control. Chinese entities now
control nearly half of global lithium production and 60 percent of the electric
battery production capacity. Within a decade, Goldman Sachs predicts China
could supply 60 percent of the world’s EVs. In short lithium is a strategic
priority for
Beijing.
USA China Lithium Rivalry?
The other major actor in the
global lithium mining world today is the United States. Albemarle, a Charlotte,
North Carolina company with an impressive board of directors, has major lithium
mining in Australia and Chile,notably, just as does China. In 2015 Albemarle
became a dominant factor in world lithium mining when it bought US company,
Rockwood Holdings. Notably, Rockwood Lithium had operations in Chile in the
Salar de Atacama, and in the same Greenbushes mine in Australia, where
China’sTianqi Industry Group owns 51 percent. That gave Albemarle 49% share of
the huge Australian lithium project, in partnership with China.
What is beginning to become
clear is that US-China tensions over Chinese economic plans also likely include
countering China influence in controlling key strategic lithium reserves. The
recent military coup in Bolivia that forced Evo Morales into Mexican exile,
from early evidence, had the fingerprints of Washington. The entry of acting
interim President Jeanine Áñez, a right-wing Christian,and the right-wing
millionaire, Luis Fernando Camacho, signals a nasty turn to the right in the country’s
political future, one openly backed by Washington. Crucial among other issues
will be whether a future government will annul the lithium mining agreements
with Chinese companies.
So too, the cancellation of
the November 16 meeting in Chile of APEC, which was to have featured a summit
on trade between Trump and Xi Jinping, takes another significance. The meeting
was also to have been the venue for major China-Chile trade deals according to
the South China Morning Post. Xi’s planned delegation would have included 150
corporate heads and plans to sign major economic agreements, further tightening
Chile-China economic ties, something the US has recently warned against.
The eruption of mass
protests across Chile opposing government public transit fare increases bears
the signs of similar economic triggers in other countries used to ignite
Washington Color Revolutions. The protests had the short-term effect of
cancelling the APEC summit in Chile. The active role of the US-financed NGOs in
the Chile protests has not been confirmed, but the growing economic relations
between Chile and China clearly are not seen as positive by Washington. China
lithium exploitation in Chile at this point is a little-discussed strategic
geopolitical factor that could be target of Washington interventions despite
the free market economics of the present government.
At this juncture what is
clear is that there is a global battle on for domination of the EV battery
market of the future and control of lithium is at the heart of it.
F. William Engdahl is
strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from
Princeton University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics, exclusively
for the online magazine “New Eastern
Outlook”
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.