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peppertree

(21,635 posts)
Sat Dec 31, 2022, 05:20 PM Dec 2022

China's Tsingshan looks to strengthen presence in Argentine lithium industry

Chinese stainless steel and nickel company Tsingshan Holding looks to double capacity of Argentina’s Centenario Ratones project to 50,000 tons annually of lithium carbonate and reach exports of US$4 billion a year from 2024, the Argentine Foreign Ministry announced on Wednesday.

Lithium carbonate is the raw material used in lithium-ion batteries, as well as some pharmaceuticals.

Tsingshan owns 49.9% of the project in Salta Province (in NW Argentina), which it shares with French mining and metals multinational Eramet.

The Centenario Ratones salt flats is located at an altitude of 3,800 m (12,500 ft) and has resources estimated at 10 million tons of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE), says Eramet.

Chinese companies have stakes in nine mining projects in Argentina, six of which are lithium.

China was the main destination for Argentine lithium exports in 2021, representing 42% of the total; the U.S. purchased 19%.

Chinese investment announcements in Argentina amounted to US$2.62 billion in 2020-22, and acquisitions and mergers involving Chinese companies totaled US$1.76 billion.

At: https://www.bnamericas.com/en/news/chinas-tsingshan-looks-to-strengthen-presence-in-argentine-lithium-industry



The Centenario Ratones salt flats in NW Argentina.

While Argentina is the world's fourth-largest producer of lithium, output has largely stalled since 2016.

Tshingshan's announcement - together with similar initiatives from Australia's Río Tinto and South Korea's FOSCO - could boost the country's lithium output in coming years.

Demand for lithium carbonate is projected to quadruple by 2030, and the compound's price has soared this year from around $14,000 a ton to over $80,000.
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China's Tsingshan looks to strengthen presence in Argentine lithium industry (Original Post) peppertree Dec 2022 OP
He who has the most batteries wins bucolic_frolic Jan 2023 #1
Good point peppertree Jan 2023 #2

peppertree

(21,635 posts)
2. Good point
Wed Jan 4, 2023, 06:51 PM
Jan 2023

Sadly, U.S. firms have been reluctant to invest in the Argentine mining sector - even during under Trump's right-wing pal Macri in 2015-19 - because "Argentine wages are too high."

Macri even chided them at one point, reminding them that "I brought wages down!" (as a boast!)

And he did - by 20% in real terms, and 45% in dollar terms.

But U.S. mining giants tend to demand African-like wage scales, and as a result they're being mostly left out - or rather, leaving themselves out - of the game.

It's not too late - but there are not that many shopping days til Christmas (so to speak).

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