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In this video interview with Laurens Tijsseling, sustainability manager for Minviro, we asked him about three key topics of concern for the lithium and battery raw materials industry, these were:
Watch the full video interview with Laurens or read the key takeaways below.
The biggest issue with ESG is that people don’t understand what it means. It’s being used as a marketing tool, rather than actually something to understand the impacts of processes or projects, or what to invest in.
The second is the aversion to technological risk. The lithium resource boom we’re having is coming out because we need to decarbonize the whole world we live in. That means that if we use the same technologies to produce lithium chemicals that we have done in the past, nothing’s going to change. So, in order for companies to get really environmentally friendly and get the regional community on board – which would be part of the social aspect – they need to really become accepting of technological risk.
Everyone thinks that domestic supply generally has a lower environmental impact than an international supply. That’s not always the case. For example, if you were to get spodumene – a lithium-containing mineral – from Australia, you would ship it to Europe and convert it to a lithium chemical. There could still be a lower environmental impact than if you would potentially get it from within Europe, given the vast number of variables that contribute to the final environmental impact, including regional energy supplies and reagent sources.
We need to think about it from an integral perspective, and then we see these three key risks to the European EV battery supply chain:
1. Electric calcining: Spodumene crystals need to be calcined in order for the lithium to be extracted out of the mineral.
Electrification really is the holy grail when it comes to decarbonizing the world that we live in. So, if you can open up the spodumene rocks to get the lithium using electricity, that’s perfect for when it comes to sustainable production.
2. Using electrolysis to produce lithium chemicals: Instead of using the traditional thermal and chemical intensive process you actually start using electricity.
Visit our dedicated battery raw materials page to discover more insights on the factors at play in the industry in 2022 and beyond.