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Lithium customers are still jostling for offtake, suggesting long term outlook is strong
Lithium customers are still jostling for offtake, suggesting long term outlook is strong

News.com.au

time3 days ago

  • Automotive
  • News.com.au

Lithium customers are still jostling for offtake, suggesting long term outlook is strong

Lithium prices are tumbling but customers involved in the EV supply chain are more focused on lithium grade and purity Lithium-ion batteries require battery-grade lithium with a purity of 99.5% or higher Juniors like Green Technology Metals and Cosmos Exploration continue to demonstrate the strength of their projects despite challenging market conditions While ASX lithium prices fall and retail investors flee, the world's battery makers are quietly locking in supply deals, with expected demand of three million tonnes by 2030 having the potential to make today's prices look like a bargain. To put the current lithium 'crash' in perspective, at US$8800 per tonne, today's prices are still nearly double the $4450/t lithium was fetching in 2012. And despite an apparent flood of material, customers are still eager to lock up future supplies, worried the market could flip on its head as demand soars. Pursuit Minerals (ASX:PUR) managing director Aaron Revelle told Stockhead, its partners involved in the EV supply chain are less concerned about the depressed market and more focused on who can deliver the ultra-pure product that tomorrow's batteries demand. Revelle said Chinese buyers, who dominate global lithium demand, are hunting for lithium chloride to refine into battery-grade material of 99.5% purity or better, which is where ASX juniors like Pursuit are separating themselves from the pack. Pursuit's Rio Grande project in Brazil has already demonstrated it can deliver 99.5% lithium carbonate, putting the asset in the premium tier offtakers are actually chasing. That's great news for future producers in the South American brine space. 'Chinese buyers are going into the South American salars which have a history of producing the higher-grade material, especially from the more established projects like Olaroz or Pheonix in Argentina,' Revelle said. 'These mines are producing 99.5% lithium carbonate and the companies that own them are upgrading the product to the 99.95% battery grade." Proven quality By remaining active even with prices at a low ebb, Pursuit is ensuring Rio Grande is ready to feed a high quality product into the flobal market. 'When you look at Rio Grande, the attraction is that it's already proven it can produce 99.5% technical grade lithium carbonate. It has a long life, it's low cost, robust and has over a million tonnes of resource with potential upside,' he said. 'You can't find projects like ours anymore where we have what we call tier-1 chemistry profile where the brine is 450-500mg/l Li, one of our drill holes had an intercept of 620mg/l Li which is getting towards the higher end of the lithium content. 'And there's still plenty of upside at our project because we were originally going to drill around six to eight holes and we've only drilled two of that program.' Pursuit is now transitioning to the next phase of development and commercialisation at the asset, after dispatching lithium carbonate samples to multiple prospective offtake and strategic partners earlier this month. Initial pilot plant production at the company's 250tpa pilot plant in Salta churned out 15kg of lithium carbonate at 98.9% purity, validating everything from their Rio Grande brine quality to their processing tech. Lithium's wild ride Revelle believes the long-term fundamentals for lithium are intact. And, he is no stranger to the lithium rollercoaster. The seasoned operator has weathered three or four price cycles since founding Argentinian-lithium focused company Centaur Resources in 2018, which sold to Arena Minerals for a tidy $23m in 2020. Two years later, with no further work done and when lithium prices caught fire, Arena was acquired by Lithium Americas Corp for US$227m. 'That's the sort of environment you'll see,' he said. 'What history has shown us is that lithium is immature – prices go up, supply comes online, price drops, then a couple years later demand catches up and more supply is needed, price spikes and it repeats the cycle. 'We're seeing surging EV sales where it's estimated to hit 7 million units globally in the first five month of 2025, that's quite significant – that's a 28% year on year growth rate,' he said. 'When you're looking at the horizon, in the next five years lithium demand is to reach 3-4x, and it's not a question of will it happen, but when it will happen. 'We'll probably see another couple of cycles before it stabilises but there's definitely another spike coming and with added project scarcity, there'll be more economies of scale introduced with more M&A to take place, and more consolidation in Argentina.' Lithium players still inking deals Plenty of other companies have also managed to attract potential partners, enter offtake deals and agreements despite the market carnage, showing interest in the metal remains strong. Argosy Minerals (ASX:AGY) has struck a spot sales contract with a Hong Kong chemical company for 60 metric tonnes of premium battery-grade lithium carbonate (>99.5% purity) from its 77.5%-owned Rincon project in Argentina's Salta province. The company is developing the 12,000tpa project with engineering and feasibility works currently underway to achieve a final investment decision. Rincon holds a total resource of 731,801t of LiCO3 with a weighted mean average lithium concentration of 329mg/L, which includes an indicated resource of 640,330t LiCO3 with a weighted mean average lithium concentration of 327mg/L. In December last year, Cosmos Exploration (ASX:C1X) signed an exclusive option agreement to acquire EAU Lithium, a private lithium development company part owned by Vulcan Energy Resources (ASX:VUL) with a technology-testing agreement with Bolivian state-owned company Yacimientos de Litio Bolivianos (YLB). This agreement enables EAU to test lithium brines from Salar de Coipasa, Salar de Empexa and Salar de Pastos Grandes salars – some of the largest salars in the country. The Bolivian Government, through YLB, is seeking to unlock its vast lithium resources to drive economic growth and establish Bolivia as a global leader in the lithium supply chain. Previous extraction attempts using chemicals plus solar evaporation-based methods have faced challenges due to the high magnesium content in the salars. By partnering with EAU lithium and using Vulcan's DLE tech, YLB aims to overcome these technical hurdles and capitalise on rising global lithium demand while reducing environmental impacts. So far, five cubic metres of brine samples have been shipped from Bolivia's lithium salars to Germany for testing. Up in Canada, Green Technology Metals' (ASX:GT1) hard rock lithium assets in Ontario are on the doorstep of North America's EV sector. Leading South Korean battery materials group EcoPro is a major shareholder, while GT1 has already locked in a lithium offtake agreement with LG Energy Solutions (also a shareholder) for 25% of its spodumene concentrate production from the Seymour lithium project for five years. First production at Seymour, home to a 10.3Mt at 1.03% Li20 resource, is targeted for 2026, with DFS work currently underway. It is GT1's flagship project and plays a central role in the Eastern Hub strategy, which involves developing multiple satellite sites to supply long-term feedstock for a planned concentrator at the site. Meanwhile, GT1's Western Hub, slated for operation in 2029, centres around the Root Bay deposit and will serve as additional feed for a proposed lithium conversion facility. An updated preliminary economic assessment reinforced the Root lithium project as a viable, standalone project delivering an increase in NPV at the Root lithium project to US$668m, after tax IRR of 53.5% and a payback period of three years. At Stockhead we tell it like it is. While Pursuit Minerals, Cosmos Exploration and Green Technology Metals are Stockhead advertisers, they did not sponsor this article.

ASX Resources Quarterly Wrap: Lithium green shoots despite market pull-back
ASX Resources Quarterly Wrap: Lithium green shoots despite market pull-back

News.com.au

time01-05-2025

  • Business
  • News.com.au

ASX Resources Quarterly Wrap: Lithium green shoots despite market pull-back

The lithium market is still in the doldrums but lithium focused resources stocks are staying active with exploration Others are safeguarding capital to capitalise on future market recovery We survey quarterly reports to bring you highlights from up and comers like Pursuit Minerals, Green Technology Metals, Cosmos Exploration and First Lithium Lithium prices are deep into the cost curve by any metric, and a number of lithium stocks are pushing ahead with exploration despite the downturn in the hope of arriving early to the next cycle. At the upper end of town, Liontown Resources (ASX:LTR) reported solid results from its Kathleen Valley project, which declared commercial production during the quarter amid a volatile trading environment. Revenue rose by 17% to $104m, with $14m in cash flow generated from operations. The company produced 95,709 dmt of spodumene concentrate and sold 93,940dmt across five shipments. LTR managing director and CEO Tony Ottavino said the company is seeing consistent, positive performance across key metrics, including the shipment of over 180,000dmt of spodumene concentrate since production started, generating $205m in revenue. He added that the emerging lithium producer remains focused on streamlining costs, with operational efficiencies continuing to pay off. Lithium frontrunner Pilbara Minerals (ASX:PLS) noted a 34% drop in production volume to 125,000t at Pilgangoora as well as a 30% slide in revenue over the prior quarter to $150m. Argonaut Funds Management's David Franklyn said although Pilbara shares have dropped 41% in the past three months, there was nothing dramatic in the March quarterly report. But it continues to show that we are 'bouncing along the bottom in the lithium market'. 'It just took another step down with the recent pull back in the market. If you look at the results, I think they're doing everything right operationally,' he added. A few green shoots were also reported at the smaller end of the market, with some highlights including the successful commissioning of Pursuit Minerals' 250tpa lithium carbonate plant in Salta, Argentina. That's where we head for our wrap of the quarterlies you may have missed. Pursuit Minerals (ASX:PUR) PUR's lithium carbonate pilot plant sits within its wider Rio Grande Sur project, which is being advanced through a deliberately phased and modular development strategy that enables the company to manage capital intensity, validate process flow efficiency, and expand in alignment with market demand. Initial production from synthetic brine has kicked off, making the transition to near-term revenue generation. Progress was also made on feasibility studies to incorporate the 339% jump in new resources that were upgraded last year (1.1Mt) and a staged development plan with the company saying it remains on track for release in H1 2025. Active discussions were also held with offtake partners who made multiple product sample requests in the quarter. It also advanced numerous engineering and geological workstreams and permitting approval processes. Green Technology Metals (ASX:GT1) GT1 said it is continuing to implement cost-control measures in direct response to challenging global lithium market conditions. GT1 managing director Cameron Henry said exploration programs have been significantly scaled back, and a targeted workforce restructure has resulted in a 40% reduction in staffing levels, retaining only those roles essential to progressing core projects. 'Given the sustained challenges in global lithium markets, all key workstreams and development timelines—including any potential Final Investment Decision (FID) at Seymour—are dependent on improved market conditions and the availability of funding support from strategic partners,' he said. 'GT1 will continue to rigorously assess its cost base and project schedule, taking further action where necessary to safeguard capital and ensure the company remains well-positioned for a market recovery.' A 1 for 3.85 non-renounceable pro rata entitlement offer during the period, raising approximately $3.46 million before costs. The Entitlement Offer and Top-Up Offer closed on April 15 with strong participation from directors John Young, Cameron Henry, Patrick Murphy, and existing long-term shareholders and institutional investors. GT1 is now preparing funding applications under the Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund (CMIF) for all three of its core projects. New applications are expected to be finalised and submitted during the upcoming quarter. Cosmos Exploration (ASX:C1X) C1X started activities that private Australian company EAU Lithium, which it acquired in December 2024, had agreed to perform under its technology agreement with Bolivian state-owned lithium company Yacimientos de Litio Bolivianos (YLB). EAU Lithium had been selected by YLB to undertake technology testing on brines from Salar de Coipasa, Salar de Empexa, and Salar de Pastos Grandes. As part of this, the company has shipped 5m3 of bulk brine samples from the three salars to Germany for testing at Vulcan Energy Resources' (ASX:VUL) facility in Germany. While these samples are still in transit from Bolivia, testing of synthetic brine formulated to replicate the major ion chemistry of the three salars is underway at the facility to provide early indications of the compatibility of Vulcan's VULSORB sorbent ahead of any future test work using the bulk brine samples. VUL's direct lithium extraction technology is being evaluated for its potential to provide a more efficient, scalable and environmentally sustainable solution for lithium recovery from Bolivia's complex brine chemistry. Successful validation of a DLE tech will represent a significant step forward for lithium extraction in Bolivia, enabling higher-yield, lower-impact processing in one of the world's largest untapped lithium resource jurisdictions. Results from the testing will support ongoing negotiations toward a proposed industrialisation agreement, which is expected to establish a long-term framework for the supply and processing of lithium-rich brine over multiple decades. This agreement would form the basis for commercial-scale development and a secure, sustainable lithium supply chain aligned with Bolivia's national development objectives. First Lithium (ASX:FL1) During the March 2025 quarter, First Lithium progressed renewals of its mining licence after the Mali government moved on March 15, 2025, to partially lift the suspension of mining permits that had been in place since September 2022. The company also received a letter from the National Director of Geology and Mines in Mali which confirmed that it could continue geophysical survey work on both the Faraba and Blakala permits in the interim while requirements for the licence renewal process were being finalised. FL1 also finalised a loan note of $1.2m via an agreement with sophisticated and professional investors. Funds will be used to finalise the licence renewal process and advance a maiden resource estimate for Blakala as well as general working capital. The resource update will include some stellar drill hits, such as strikes in the Eastern pegmatite zones including 24m at 1.53% Li2O from 129m, 28.59m at 1.51% from 117m and 9m at 1.62% from 117m. Anything above 1% Li2O is generally considered economic with only a handful of deposits reporting grades upwards of 1.4%. The loan funding will occur in three $400,000 tranches with a conversion price of $0.10 each, with interest accruing at 10% per annum and payable in stock on the same terms as the loan.

Lithium could turn quickly, and Argentina is the place to be
Lithium could turn quickly, and Argentina is the place to be

News.com.au

time22-04-2025

  • Automotive
  • News.com.au

Lithium could turn quickly, and Argentina is the place to be

Lithium forecasters are getting more bullish that deficits will emerge in 2026 Argentina is emerging as the place to be for the next upswing in the cycle We speak to two juniors poised to springboard when lithium recovers Most lithium jurisdictions have seen handbrakes placed on expansion projects, production centres paused and projects delayed thanks to a crunch on lithium prices caused by oversupply in the market for the electric vehicle ingredient. Sentiment in the battery metal has tumbled as prices of lithium chemicals have slid from all-time highs of US$80,000/t and above in late 2022 to US$9100/t on Tuesday. But EV demand growth has continued at a pace of 29% so far this year, with Rho Motion estimating 4.1 million units were sold in the first quarter of 2025. While China accounted for 2.4m units, up 36%, EU sales were also 22% higher at 900,000 units with North American sales up 16% to 500,000 units. As demand lifts from the transport sector and battery energy storage systems surprise to the upside, deficits could emerge quicker than a bearish market projects. Citi for instance, late last year, projected a deficit on a lithium carbonate equivalent basis of 12,000t in 2026 and 34,000t in 2027, equivalent to around 2% of supply. That's music to the ears of market believers like Pursuit Minerals (ASX:PUR) managing director Aaron Revelle, whose firm is continuing to advance the Rio Grande Sur lithium brine project in Argentina. "Now, there's a lot of people saying that that's quite light – a 2% deficit," he told Stockhead. "(But) if you look back at the major price surge, which was driven by an 8% deficit in the market that peaked the price from US$10,000 to upwards of US$80,000 per tonne. " That was a freak event. If you look at a lot of the analyst coverage around that, no one really saw that coming." And Revelle says there are reasons to think those stocks based in Argentina – where production is expected to buck the global trend and lift 75% this year – could be big winners when the market shift occurs. Plenty of cheerleaders It's not just companies themselves saying it. Goldman Sachs analysts have long suggested they prefer "briners over miners". The big attraction is the cost base, which comes in at the bottom end of the global curve, well below the cost base of Chinese and Zimbabwean lepidolite and WA spodumene producers, with the exception of the ultra-high grade Greenbushes mine in WA's South West. "Historically, a lot of these mines have been operating on lower margins. 10 years ago, the price was US$4000-5000 per tonne and what's being absorbed into EVs, that used to be the entire lithium market," he said. "In fact, it was less than that for a long period of time." Given the low cost nature of its brine operations and stalling production growth out of nearby Chile, where a process to wholly or partially nationalise salars in the former numero uno lithium producing nation has cruelled foreign investment, Argentina has emerged as a hotspot for M&A. It was the primary focus of Rio Tinto's (ASX:RIO) recent $10 billion cash splash on Arcadium Lithium, with the mining giant also signing off on the US$2.5bn construction of the 60,000tpa Rincon DLE project in late 2024, while small cap Galan Lithium (ASX:GLN) recently knocked back a US$150 million non-binding offer from carmaker Renault and China's Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, baying for a higher offer if it is to part with its Hombre Muerto West and Candelas projects. The latter later announced a lithium chloride offtake and funding deal with US focused lithium group Authium, which will fund and operate a processing plant at HMW, prepping it for lithium chloride concentrate production in H1 2026. Pursuit's Rio Grande Sur contains a JORC resource of 1.104Mt of lithium carbonate equivalent at 505.8 mg/L Li (591.9kt at 515mg/L Li indicated, 512.5kt at 512.5mg/L Li inferred), and Revelle says interest in Argentina projects is so high because of the rarity of these resources. "There is limited supply. That's something I'm quite vocal about," he said. "When you look at Argentina as a tier-1 address, you've got 16 known salars. There are some deposits outside of the salars, like Tres Cobales which is not included. "But the known salars like Hombre Muerto, Rincon, Pizuelos, Rio Grande, where we're situated, these are very well mapped." Nick Horsley, the CEO of fellow Argentine lithium brine explorer American Salars Lithium (CSE:USLI),which has interests also in projects across the US, Canada and Brazil, said those in control of the 'smart money' were seeing lithium projects in the country as a buying opportunity. "If you kind of listen to guys like Rothschild, the time to buy is when there's blood in the street," he told Stockhead's Tylah Tully in a recent video interview. "Companies like Rio Tinto in the last 48 months have invested over US$9 billion, over US$7bn in M&A just buying, and then they're talking about doing two and a half on their Rincon acquisition and development costs. So, the smart money, I think, is looking at this as a real opportunity to buy while the supply chains are in a bit of a surplus." An improving regulatory environment Combine that with an increasingly positive pro-development regulatory framework under the government of Javier Milei, and it's easy to see why businesses continue to invest in Argentina's lithium scene, which according to Australia's Department of Industry, Science and Resources will see its share of global output lift from 6% to 13% by 2030. Argentina recently struck a deal with the IMF to release up to US$20 billion in loan funds after abandoning strict currency controls, a move that will make it easier for foreign investors to move cash in and out of the South American country, while his RIGI rules, which promise tax breaks for large projects, have also attracted major miners. "Milei's probably produced one of the best political environments from a federal level with introduction of things like RIGI," Revelle said. " He's attracting large scale investment, opening up the currency controls, opening up the oil and gas sector, providing that regulatory stability. "That's a big thing, especially when you compare the Lithium Triangle, you have across the other side of the fence, Chile. At a market cap of ~$5 million, Pursuit is among the cheapest entry points into the Argentine lithium nexus. But that doesn't mean it is not well advanced. At Rio Grande Sur, the ASX junior has produced its first high purity lithium carbonate in a maiden operational run at a 250tpa pilot plant in the Salta Province. The next step will be optimising processing parameters to upgrade the 98.9% LCE product to 99.95% to garner the highest premiums for battery grade product. Staged production scenarios of 5000tpa and 15,000tpa are being assessed in feasibility studies for the commercial scale Rio Grande Sur project, with Revelle saying Pursuit was already seeing interest from Asian customers in the 5000tpa scenario across both lithium chloride and lithium carbonate products. "We're looking towards the end of this year, early next year, to start getting some of those studies out, looking at what we need to do to take those studies from scoping-PFS level to BFS level," Revelle said. "We're looking at what the financing is and looking at the global macro scenario as well. "If we definitely see some of these numbers that Citi and other analysts have come out with, that surplus in the market will slowly turn to deficit or get below the forecast surplus. "Then that really gives us the opportunity to accelerate that FID." Customers still lining up American Salars' Pocitos project contains a 760,000t LCE inferred resource contained across the Pocitos 1 concession (which USLI owns) and Pocitos 2 (which it doesn't). All of the drilling for the NI 43-101 compliant resource has been conducted on Pocitos 1, which contains around 60% of the ground on which the resource is based. Located in Salta province, Horsley says it has some of the best infrastructure solutions in the state, "if not all of Argentina". "You have access to the port of Antofagasta by way of rail in Chile. It's got a natural gas pipeline. There's a highway access. There's lots of water," he said. "We're south of the Rincon development owned by Rio Tinto. They're talking billions of dollars of development money and infrastructure. So in terms of that, I think we're actually situated probably in the best place. "We're just east of Arizaro, which will see a huge development as well, south of the Olaroz-Cauchari complex as well. So I think probably the number one salar in terms of infrastructure." Horsley said surpluses remained fragile and he was aware of "several potential offtakers". "The supply chain is very fragile where all the analysts are predicting 2026 to enter a deficit again. That's not a huge number to put it into a deficit," he told Tully. "You have a plant go down or consumption increases. You've really got to monitor the EV developments in China as well and also what happens if China just refuses to share lithium with the rest of the world all of a sudden."

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