About Lithium
Global Production & Demand OutlookProductionThe extraction and production of Lithium comes from three primary sources. Mining hard rock --ores such as spodumene (which is the most expensive type of lithium production), hectorite clays in the south western United States and brine solutions located under salt beds. Brines have dominated production as they represent the lowest cost extraction. According to the USGS the global production of Lithium Carbonate Equivalent (LCE) is 128,000 tonnes. Roughly 50% of all production of LCE comes from Chile (63,600 tonnes) and 80% of the global production comes from just four countries (Chile, Argentina, Australia and China). An important consideration is that supply will grow with new entrants to the market. The difficulty comes from what type of production the exploration companies are presenting. Companies exploring brine type deposits can be fully developed and selling lithium within a 2-3 year timeframe. Conversely, it would take a company with a spodumene type deposit 5-6 years to begin production. Two very commonly cited reports from Meridan Research ("The Trouble with Lithium" and "The Trouble with Lithium Part 2") strongly suggest that lithium will have supply constraints, which of course is a great concern for auto companies converting to electric vehicles. "Only a brine lake or salt pan deposit that contains lithium chloride is economically and energetically viable for Li-ion batteries." (Meridan Research "The trouble with Lithium"). Lithium Demand, by End-Use Segment Demand Much of demand increase will be derived from digital cameras, laptop computers, cellular phones and of course electric vehicles. Most experts hold that demand for the lithium-ion ("Li-ion") powered vehicles such as the Chevy Volt and Nissan Leaf will far surpass current demand for hybrid vehicles powered by the Nickel-metal hydride ("NiMH") battery such as the Toyota Prius and Honda Insight. The economics of day to day operation of the Li-ion powered electric vehicle will likely be the key driver in the shift in consumer demand. Leading industry analyst Jon Hykawy of Byron Capital Markets notes: "We are projecting 40% Li demand increase by 2014, with batteries accounting for 34% of use, the largest single end-use segment." Demand Growth Projections (Tonnes LCE)
Source: Byron Capital Markets Jon Hykawy, Ph.D., MBA | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||