Zimbabwe holds some of the world’s biggest hard-rock lithium deposits
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Zim targets to be 5th largest lithium producer

CHINESE investors racing to secure lithium supplies could help Zimbabwe rise to become the world’s fifth biggest primary producer of the material that’s vital to battery electric vehicles and the green revolution, mining consultancy CRU said.

The lithium industry in Africa’s top producer has rapidly expanded, buoyed by about US$1 billion of investments during the past two years by Chinese companies including Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, Sinomine Resource Group, Chengxin Lithium Group and Yahua Group.

The Chinese companies, faced with production constraints at home, have focused on Zimbabwe to lock-in future lithium supplies.

The investments could boost capacity to 192000 tons of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) per year of petalite and spodumene in 2027, from 13 000 tonnes per year LCE in 2022, Cameron Hughes, a battery markets analyst at CRU said in a report.

“These investments will place Zimbabwe as the fifth largest primary producer of lithium by 2025, after Argentina, contributing more than either Canada or Brazil,” Hughes said.

While Zimbabwe holds some of the world’s biggest lithium deposits, the metal has only been mined at Bikita Minerals, producing petalite – a form of lithium used in ceramics, aluminium smelting and glass – since in the 1950s.

Sinomine paid US$180 million for Bikita Minerals last year and has spent US$300 million to expand the petalite and spodumene capacity to more than 90 000 tonnes LCE per year from 6000 tonnes LCE per year in 2020.

Investments by Sinomine and others mean Zimbabwe’s capacity could rise to about 11 percent of global LCE production in five years from just two percent in 2020, said Martin Jackson, the head of battery raw materials at CRU. Still, while the capacity is “significant”, full utilisation would depend on lithium demand and prices, Jackson added.

“I doubted the speed of the ramp up of many of those operations but those Chinese investors have brought lithium to market much quicker than I ever expected,” he said. Despite the huge potential, softening prices might not support investments on marginal projects, Jackson added. —Reuters

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