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Simon Harlow

Simon Harlow

Simon is a writer for Oilprice.com

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Move Over Oil – Lithium Is The Future Of Transportation

Electric Car

Just a few years ago, we would have scoffed at the idea that electric vehicles could be mainstream anytime soon, or that the global appetite for lithium-ion batteries and mass power storage would be so voracious, and so sudden. Today, no one is scoffing, and lithium is being viewed as our new super-mineral that will catapult us firmly into the next century.

Now Tesla has started buying up Nevada and building its battery gigafactory, with competing gigafactories following suit and competing electric vehicle (EV) manufacturers all throwing billions at this fast-moving market that no one has been able to keep up with.

Not only has the EV taken its first major leap into the mainstream—most notably indicated by Tesla’s phenomenal advance sales of its affordable Model 3—but it’s gone beyond the mainstream.

Electric vehicles will be the rule rather than the exception; and lithium the number one commodity of our time.

Germany has mandated that all new cars registered in the country will have to be emissions-free by the year 2030. And to make this a reality, the government has cut a deal with automakers to jointly spend $1.4 billion on incentives to boost electric car sales. They’re hoping to sell 500,000 EVs by 2020. So they’re subsidizing the EV industry, and giving lithium an automatic boost at a time when it doesn’t even need it.

Norway is following suit as well, working on legislation to outright ban the sale of gasoline-powered cars by 2025.

And in the U.S., the Wall Street Journal now reports that the mainstream popularity of electric cars will reduce gasoline demand by 5% to 20% over the next two decades, assuming that EVs gain more than 35% market share by 2035.

While our energy revolution got off to a slow start, better cars at more affordable prices, tighter air-pollution regulations and a growing global desire to halt climate change have pushed the revolution over the edge. It’s all powered by lithium, which has always enjoyed steady demand just from our consumer electronics cravings—but is now about to go where no mineral has gone before.

Tesla Motors (NASDAQ:TSLA), Nissan Motor Co. (OTC:NSANY), Hyundai Motor Co. (OTC:HYMTF) and Volkswagen AG (ETR:VOW3) are all putting out EVs, and Ford Motor Co. is planning to invest $4.5 billion over the next four years to develop an amazing 12 new EVs and hybrids, according to the WSJ.

“Electric vehicles are one of the biggest market disruptors in centuries—which makes lithium the commodity that gives us the most reason to be bullish,” Oroplata Resources CEO Craig Alfred told Oilprice.com.

Let the Hoarding Begin

Metal hoarding and demand is driving up prices to $15,000 per ton or higher on the spot market, vs. only $5,000 a couple years ago.

In 2014, lithium prices grew 20%. And in 2015 battery grade lithium spot prices in China surged from $7,000 per ton in the middle of the year to a market-shocking $20,000 per ton earlier this year.

Market consumption could triple from 160,000 metric tons to a staggering 470,000 metric tons by 2025. And even if the EV market share increased by only 1%, it would raise lithium demand by 70,000 metric tons—which is about half of today’s demand.

This has made the commodity—described by Goldman Sachs as the “new gasoline” a prime target for the break-out of junior miners who are keen to get in on what has traditionally been an oligopoly. These juniors will be just as disruptive to the market as EVs themselves.

In the race to secure new lithium supply acreage, the juniors are relentless, and the newest junior on the scene is Oroplata Resources, Inc., which recently staked its own claim in Tesla’s backyard, with the 100%-owned Western Nevada Basin project. Related: Slavery At Sea: The Ugly Underbelly Of Oil Shipping

Close to home—and close to the North America EV center stage—there’s nowhere else to be but Nevada, which has the only brine-sourced lithium in the country and has strategically positioned itself to be the front line of the American energy revolution.

The ‘gigafactory’ state is now the scene of the hottest activity since the California gold rush, and the new entrants are scrambling to stake their claims around the only producing lithium mine in America--Albermarle’s Silver Peak Mine.

According to Fortune magazine, by some estimates the Silver Peak Mine alone “holds the promise of even greater untapped riches of the valuable metal buried beyond the mine.”

The juniors are betting that Nevada’s Clayton Valley Basin holds a lot more lithium than we have ever imagined, and geology may just prove them right.

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“Never before has there been commodity supply that is this fantastically tight,” says Alfred of Oroplata Resources, which has just confirmed the presence of “highly anomalous lithium values” from its Western Nevada Basin project, right in the heart of the state’s lithium ground zero. “Right now it’s all about getting it out of the ground first and becoming the next suppliers of a revolution that’s already unfolding at a phenomenal pace.”

Musk would agree. When he cut the ribbon on the new gigafactory he noted that he alone would use up most of the world’s existing lithium supply.

“In order to produce a half million cars per year…we would basically need to absorb the entire world’s lithium-ion production,” Musk said.

And that’s just one man, one brand of EV and one gigafactory. The race is indeed on to be the first to get at new lithium supply—and there is every reason to be bullish on the new juniors who will disrupt the entire market.

By SImon Harlow of Oilprice.com

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Leave a comment
  • Mickey on June 22 2016 said:
    OK, but there is enough Li there, because you know, it's a rare element. And second opinion, what do we do, replacing drilling with mining all over the world?
  • P G Bailey on June 22 2016 said:
    Lithium is a desperately dangerous, inflammable element the cannot be recycled. Battery technology is in its infancy. 10 years from now, lithium will be a distant memory while the EPA tries to figure out what to do with all the dead batteries.
  • Adrian on June 22 2016 said:
    At worst we can stuff 'em in all the disused coal mines...

    Just curious, how much coal, oil and gas do you fellows capture and recycle after burning it?

    FWIW, lithium "mining" consists of letting salt brines evaporate in shallow pools, similar to sea salt production. In some cases the resulting salt is used as a mood-stabilzing medication.

    Maybe that explains spontaneous human combustion...
  • Philip Branton on June 22 2016 said:
    Lithium is only ONE of the choices that will be available. The efforts in nano-technology and personal 3D carbon nano-tube type printing will usher in a number of choices for consumers. Our national research labs need to get off their duffs and tell "legacy" corporations to pound "pharaoh" sand..!! Elon Musk is not stupid and neither is a Ali-Ba-Ba clone battery provider...!!

    Lets go.....move it...!!
  • ACE814 on June 22 2016 said:
    I'm all for renewable energy to go along with our current energy infrastructure, but this is amazingly naïve. The author doesn't say anything about what it actually takes to mine lithium and how dirty it will be compared to the tiny footprint of an oil and/or gas well? Not to mention what happens when all the lithium is gone? Lithium is very scarce and when it's gone, it's gone. What will you use to mine lithium, electric dump trucks and earth movers? I like the effort to get something new out there, but let's be realistic.

Leave a comment




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