Albermarle gets environmental nod for lithium plant

  • Spanish Market: Metals, Oil products
  • 09/11/18

US-based lithium and speciality chemicals producer Albermarle has received environmental approval for the development of a lithium hydroxide plant near Bunbury in the southwest of Western Australia (WA).

While the company is still awaiting some other approvals before making a final investment decision on the plant, which is allowed to produce up to 100,000 t/yr, approval by WA's Environmental Protection Authority is seen as a major step forward for the proposed project, estimated to cost around A$1bn ($723mn).

Albermarle, headquartered in Charlotte, North Carolina, owns 50pc of Talison Lithium, which owns and operates the Greenbushes mine, the world's largest producer of hard rock lithium concentrate. The other shareholder is China's Tianqi Lithium, which is building a A$700mn lithium hydroxide plant at Kwinana, south of Perth. Albermarle also has significant lithium operations in Chile, the world's largest lithium brine producer.

Albermarle and Tianqi have spent A$320mn on expanding Greenbushes' capacity and are planning to invest a further $600mn to boost lithium concentrate output to 2.3mn t/yr from 2021.

It is expected that Albermarle will develop five lithium hydroxide "trains", each with a capacity of 20,000 t/yr in a staged development over a few years.

Already the world's biggest supplier of hard rock lithium, WA is increasingly becoming a premier location for downstream lithium conversion, with the main focus on lithium hydroxide. Kidman Resources and its joint-venture partner Chile's SQM have announced plans for a 45,000 t/yr lithium hydroxide plant at Kwinana and Perth-based resources firms Neometals and Mineral Resources are also planning plants.

Battery producers are increasingly preferring lithium hydroxide rather than lithium carbonate for cathodes as it gives batteries greater energy density, capacity and longer life. Concentrate from hard rock lithium can be directly converted into lithium hydroxide, while concentrate from lithium brine must be converted into lithium carbonate before it can be made into lithium hydroxide.

The WA government has established a special lithium and battery materials taskforce to take advantage of the state's lithium production status, along with its output of nickel and cobalt.


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07/05/24

Liberty Merchant Bar to be 'mothballed', sources say

Liberty Merchant Bar to be 'mothballed', sources say

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Global battery installation growth slows in 1Q: SNE


07/05/24
07/05/24

Global battery installation growth slows in 1Q: SNE

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General Petroleum expands UAE base oil storage facility


07/05/24
07/05/24

General Petroleum expands UAE base oil storage facility

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Japan’s Daihatsu fully reopens domestic auto operations


07/05/24
07/05/24

Japan’s Daihatsu fully reopens domestic auto operations

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Brazil unlocks relief spending to flooded state


06/05/24
06/05/24

Brazil unlocks relief spending to flooded state

Sao Paulo, 6 May (Argus) — Brazil's president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva signed a decree to ease relief spending to Rio Grande do Sul state, which has been hit with historically heavy rainfall and floods. "We are going to do everything in our power to contribute to Rio Grande do Sul's recovery," he said today after signing the decree, adding that was only the first of "a large number of acts" for the state. The decree recognizes the state of emergency in Rio Grande do Sul and allows the federal government to grant funding and tax waivers to the state without having to comply with spending limits. In addition, it makes rules for public authorities to contract services and purchase products more flexible. The decree still needs both senate and congressional approval — which should be hasty, as both the senate and house leaders were present at the decree's signing. It is still not clear how much money it will take to rebuild the state, chief of staff Rui Costa and planning minister Simone Tebet said. But the minister of regional integration Waldez Goez estimated that it will take around R1bn ($200mn) to rebuild the state's highways. Rio Grande do Sul has been hit with heavy rainfall since 29 April. The highest volumes reached the central areas of Rio Grande do Sul, with cities receiving rainfall of 150-500mm (6-20 inches), regional rural agency Emater-RS data show. The monitoring station of Restinga Seca city, in the center of the state, recorded rainfall of about 540mm. Rainfall in Rio Grande do Sul overall surpassed 135mm in most of the state, according to the US National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA). State capital Porto Alegre is expected to receive more rain later this week, according to Rio Grande do Sul-based weather forecaster MetSul. MetSul warned that parts of the Porto Alegre metropolitan area could remain uninhabitable for weeks or months. The floods have left at least 83 dead and 111 missing, according to the state government. An additional 130,000 people have been displaced from their homes. By Lucas Parolin Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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