All posts tagged: critical minerals

New low-temperature process extracts battery-grade lithium with far less waste and energy

New low-temperature process extracts battery-grade lithium with far less waste and energy

Lithium sits at the center of the battery economy. Yet getting it out of rock still looks surprisingly crude. Spodumene, the world’s most common lithium-bearing hard rock, is usually blasted with heat above 1,000 degrees Celsius. After that, acids and other chemicals pull out the metal. What remains is largely waste. That old route has helped China dominate lithium refining. Even though countries like the United States and Australia hold large lithium resources of their own, China still leads the industry. Additionally, it has made hard-rock lithium more expensive than lithium drawn from brines. Yet brine extraction can place environmental strain on water-stressed regions. A team led by researchers from MIT now says it has found a way around one of the industry’s central bottlenecks. Specifically, the challenge is how to crack open hard rock without the punishing heat, heavy waste, and long chain of cleanup steps that define conventional refining. In a paper published in Science, the group describes a low-temperature, closed-loop process that extracts battery-grade lithium salts from spodumene. It also recovers alumina …

From sand to supply chain power: Can India weaken China’s grip on rare earths?

From sand to supply chain power: Can India weaken China’s grip on rare earths?

The absence of heavy rare earths presents a structural limitation. EY’s Gupta noted that 60 to 70 per cent of heavy rare earth supply currently originates from Myanmar, much of which is processed in China.  “That supply is very restricted. (Heavy rare earth) is there in Myanmar, there’s some of it in China, which is also a choke point,” said Gupta. India imported between 80 and 90 per cent of its rare earth magnets and related materials from China in the financial year ending March 2025, amounting to about US$190 million, according to government data.  To reduce such dependence, the Indian government has pursued overseas resource acquisition. In 2019, it set up Khanij Bidesh India Limited (KABIL), a state-owned joint venture company tasked with securing critical and strategic mineral assets abroad to ensure a stable supply for domestic use.  In January 2024, KABIL signed an agreement with Argentina for lithium exploration and mining projects, and has reportedly been in discussions regarding lithium assets in Australia.  Raju said similar overseas arrangements elsewhere could be explored for rare …

Trump’s critical mineral reserve is an admission that the future is electric

Trump’s critical mineral reserve is an admission that the future is electric

The Trump administration announced this week the U.S. government would work to build a $11.7 billion stockpile of critical minerals. That’s the headline; the subtext is more intriguing. The stockpile initiative, branded as Project Vault, is the latest attempt by the administration to secure supplies of critical minerals for U.S. manufacturers and what President Donald Trump says will ensure “American businesses and workers are never harmed by any shortage.” It follows recent investments from the administration into rare earth producers, including equity stakes in miners USA Rare Earth and MP Materials. Individually, they can be interpreted as an administration taking steps to calm a part of the market that has been roiled by its own trade wars. Collectively, they’re an admission, however tacit or subconscious, that the future relies on electric technologies, including electric vehicles and wind turbines. In his announcement, Trump alluded to the world’s dependence on China for a slew of critical minerals. Over the last year-plus, China has wielded its dominance to counter tariff threats from the Trump administration, restricting exports of …