born at 321.89 PPM CO2

"Quality is never an accident. It is always the result of intelligent effort." - John Ruskin

Friday, 27 December 2024

(ECN) MCDERMITT CALDERA LITHIUM FIND

According to a finding at McDermitt Caldera located along the border of Nevada and Oregon, this may contain the largest lithium deposit in the world, estimated at 20 to 40 metric tons. If true, this would double the country’s reserves of clay-based lithium, enhancing lithium production in the US and reducing imports.

The McDermitt Caldera is a caldera which formed 16.4 million years ago because of a major volcano eruption. A preferable condition for lithium enrichment was developed through its unique geologic substratum. Researchers detected high concentrations of illite, an unusual mineral that maintains an extraordinarily high lithium content: this illite-rich claystone formed when hydrothermal activity modified a more typical clay mineral, smectite, leading to an increase of up to 2.4% lithium – nearly double that of standard lithium sources.

“The way illite concentrated lithium in this area is unique,” the co-author of the study, Dr. Thomas Benson, stated. “This may establish a new metric of high-quality lithium deposits.” The size and quality of this deposit might rival Bolivia’s salt flats, considered the largest lithium reserve in the world.

Lithium is the key element for EV batteries, lithium-ion technology in all smartphones, and renewable energy storage, and it is what the clean energy economy will inevitably rely upon. This finding should cut down the dependence of the US on imports, particularly from China, which is the world leader in lithium processing. Lithium Americas, getting ready to operate in Thacker Pass, will begin mining in 2026, using state-of-the-art claystone extraction techniques.

“This affirms our work at Thacker Pass,” said Tim Crowley, Lithium Americas VP. “It is a critical step toward meeting US battery materials demand and strengthening supply chains.” The promise of a secure supply chain, jobs, and US aspirations in renewable energy and emissions envelops the discovery.

Environmental groups and Native American tribes are angry against this project. Conservationists fear about the destruction due to mining in wildlife habitat-these are deep within the greater sage-grouse and pronghorn antelope community ranges.

Indigenous groups have the cultural and spiritual context to demonstrate against the damage to Thacker Pass, equating it with defiling the Arlington National Cemetery, and faulted the process of permitting with inadequate consultation.

John Hadder, Director of Great Basin Resource Watch, called for stricter oversight. “The permitting process for Thacker Pass was rushed and inadequate,” he said. “Future projects must respect the environment and Indigenous rights.” More of this article (Econews) - link - more like this (lithium mining) - link - more like this (Nevada) - link

No comments:

Post a Comment