Major Chinese lithium producer Ganfeng Lithium bought the remaining 40pc interest in Mali Lithium for $342.7mn, the company said on 3 July.
It bought the remaining stake from Australian mining company Leo Lithium. This raises the Chinese producer's stake in Mali Lithium to 100pc. The move aims to increase control of Mali's Goulamina lithium mine.
The company spent $138mn in September 2023 to buy a 55pc stake in Mali Lithium. It spent $65mn in January 2024 for another 5pc interest.
Goulamina project's total resources include 7.14mn t of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE), containing an average grade of 1.37pc lithium oxide.
Ganfeng is developing the Goulamina project in two phases. The firm started construction of the first phase in 2022, with a capacity of 506,000 t/yr of spodumene concentrate. It began production in December 2024.
The second phase will raise the project's total capacity to 1mn t/yr. Further details, including construction schedules and the second phase's launch dates, were not disclosed.
Ganfeng completed loading the first batch of lithium concentrate from its Goulamina project in Mali on 24 June. The cargo has left for China and is expected to arrive at the country's ports in early August.
Ganfeng produced 130,253t lithium carbonate equivalent of lithium chemical products — including carbonate, hydroxide, chloride and metal — in 2024. This was up by 25pc from 2023.
The firm is ramping up production at the Cauchari-Olaroz project in Argentina. The development has a capacity of 40,000 t/yr of lithium carbonate.
The project's output surged to 25,400t in 2024 from 6,000t in 2023, when it started production. Its output is expected to rise to 30,000-35,000t in 2025.