The spending boom reflects sustained investor confidence in lithium demand despite market volatility, with Canada and Australia leading the charge. That clash — surging need versus overshoot — sets the stage for the metal’s 'final boss' test. If prices can hold this new floor, the bulls may get a clean runway. Why The Sell-Off Ran Too Far Cash costs for new lithium from major producers now sit dangerously close to current spot prices. Even industry giants admit half their projects are now "under"" review"—that’s code for scrapped. The industry already mothballed several high-cost mines in Western Australia when prices sliced below $10,000 per tonne. Brine and hard-rock projects can ramp up in 12-24 months, but mega-mines still need 6-8 years. The pipeline beyond 2027 is thin, and the IEA sees a supply deficit opening “by the 2030s” under current policies. Capital Is Drying Up at the Worst Time The price collapse wiped out producers' cash flow just when new projects needed funding the most. Credit markets that welcomed lithium deals two years ago now slam shut. With capital pipes closing, the forward mine slate thins quickly. - The IEA calculates that meeting its base-case lithium demand will still require 55 additional average-sized mines by 2035.
Refining bottlenecks are still dangerous: three countries — China, Chile, and Argentina — control roughly 70% of battery-grade lithium chemicals. Any export curb (think China’s graphite chess move) — or even a paperwork delay — could shove the market from surplus to shortage overnight. Demand Tailwinds Nobody’s Modeling Right Here's the demand catalyst hiding in plain sight: battery storage. Grid-scale battery projects jumped 85% in 2024 and now consume 15% of all lithium cells. Catalyst #1: Grid Storage Revolution Everyone focuses on electric vehicles. They're missing the bigger story. Grid-scale battery installations jumped 85% in 2024, now consuming 15% of global lithium supply. Why does this matter? AI data centers need stable power. If small modular reactors slip past 2030 (likely), batteries must fill the gap. That's pure upside for lithium demand. Catalyst #2: Chemistry Shifts Don't Matter Bears claim LFP batteries will crush lithium demand. They're wrong. LFP packs use the same amount of lithium per kWh as nickel-rich batteries. The chemical change hurts nickel and cobalt, not lithium. Catalyst #3: Policy Deadlines Force Action Watch these dates: - Late 2025: Chinese subsidies reset, forcing cathode makers to restock.
- July 2026: EU Critical Raw Materials Act kicks in, requiring "friend-sourcing."
- Ongoing: North American battery plants need a supply to claim $35/kWh tax credits.
Demand isn’t plateauing. In the IEA’s stated-policies outlook, lithium use has already tripled since 2020 and is on track to triple again by 2035, topping 700,000 tonnes of lithium. | |
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