Greenbushes mine

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Greenbushes mine
Location
Greenbushes mine is located in Western Australia
Greenbushes mine
Greenbushes mine
LocationGreenbushes
Western Australia
CountryAustralia
Coordinates33°51′33″S 116°03′20″E / 33.85930°S 116.05545°E / -33.85930; 116.05545Coordinates: 33°51′33″S 116°03′20″E / 33.85930°S 116.05545°E / -33.85930; 116.05545
Production
ProductsLithium
Production1.95m tonnes/year
Financial year2020
History
Opened1906
Active1906 - Now
Owner
CompanyTalison Lithium; JV between Tianqi Lithium (51%) & Albermarle Corporation (49%)
Websitehttps://www.talisonlithium.com/

The Greenbushes lithium mine is an open-pit mining operation in Western Australia and is the world's largest hard-rock lithium mine.[1] Located to the south of the town of Greenbushes, Western Australia, the mine is situated on the site of the world's largest known hard-rock lithium deposit.[2] The Greenbushes lithium mine produces approximately 1.95 million tonnes (4.3 billion pounds) of lithium spodumene annually.[3] The mine is 250 kilometres (160 mi) south of Perth and 90 kilometres (56 mi) south east of the Port of Bunbury, a major bulk-handling port in south Western Australia.

The mine is owned and operated by Talison Lithium which as of 2014 became a joint venture partnership between the Tianqi Lithium Corporation and the Albemarle Corporation, two of the world's largest lithium producers.[1] At the mine's current size, it can fulfil a third of worldwide demand for Lithium spodumene concentrate,[1] that is used to produce lithium hydroxide and an essential component of lithium-ion batteries.

Global demand for lithium is expected to grow at a rate of 33.3% annually,[3] and as such the mine is undergoing expansion along with the construction of the two nearby lithium processing facilities.[4] The Kemerton facility is owned by Albemarle Corporation, and the Kwinana facility by Tianqi. Lithium industry revenue has increased at an annualised 8.6% over the five years through to 2019–20, to total $2.7 billion.[5]

Operations[]

The Greenbushes mine is the world's largest hard rock lithium mine by reserves & resources, production, and capacity.[5] The facilities operations are made up of the mine and two nearby processing facilities that convert the raw lithium spodumene concentrate into lithium hydroxide before being sold to many of the world's leading battery manufacturers including LG Chem, CATL and Northvolt.[1]

The twin processing facilities nearby are currently under construction and are Albemarle's Kemerton plant and Tianqi's Kwinana plant that are in nearby Kemerton and Kwinana, respectively. The Kwinana plant is located 250 kilometres (160 mi) north of the Greenbushes site, while the Kemerton plant is 100 kilometres (62 mi) north of the Greenbushes facility. The Kwinana facility will be Australia's first lithium processing facility and one of the first outside of China. The cost benefits of a processing facility located close to a mine are reported to be considerable.[1] In the past brine mining for lithium has been far more cost effective and easier than hard-rock lithium mining[6] however, preliminary calculations show the Greenbushes mine may be the first hard-rock lithium mine to show that hard-rock mining can be as cost effective and profitable as brine mining given the strategic benefits of having the processing next to extraction site.[4]

The Kemerton facility is still undergoing preliminary construction. While the Kwinana facility is undergoing final stage commissioning for the first part of its operation.[7] The Kwinana facility is the world's first fully automated battery-grade lithium hydroxide manufacturing facility outside of mainland China and can operate 24/7.[8] The total capacity of the plant is believed to be 48 thousand tonnes (110 million pounds) per annum.[4] The facility is also the world's first hard-rock sourced lithium chemical manufacturing facility outside of China, the largest of its kind and is expected to have the lowest cash cost of any lithium processing plant globally.[8] Tianqi has invested over 600 million USD into their lithium processing facility.[1]

The Kwinana facility is estimated to provide 200 permanent full-time local jobs for the Kwinana community when it begins full time operations.[9] As of 2018 Talison was operating the Greenbushes mine at only 60% of its total capacity and it is estimated that if the facility were operated at 100% capacity it could fulfil total global lithium demand by itself.[10] Greenbushes alone controls 26% of the raw material market share of lithium.[3]

Greenbushes lithium deposit[]

The Greenbushes lithium deposit is the world's largest hard rock lithium deposit. The deposit is internationally renowned for containing the highest-grade quality lithium spodumene in the world.[2] A nearby deposit named the Kapanga deposit has recently been discovered and has received Joint Ore Reserves Committee resource recognition.[11] “Greenbushes pegmatite is a giant pegmatite dike of Archean age with substantial Li-Sn-Ta mineralisation, including half the world’s tantalum resource”.[2] The mine is estimated to have resources of 8.7 megatonnes (19 billion pounds) LCE and reserves of 6.8 megatonnes (15 billion pounds) LCE.[10] The mine produces the highest product quality and sets the benchmark for chemical-grade specifications of minimum 6.0% Li
2
O
and maximum 0.8% Fe
2
O
3
as compared to other concentrates typically in the range 5.5–5.8% Li
2
O
and over 1% Fe
2
O
3
.[2]

Ownership[]

Greenbushes mine operator

The mine was bought by Tianqi Lithium Corporation in 2013 however, Tianqi soon came into financial difficulties and was forced to offload the minority stake in the mine to the competing bidder the American-based Albemarle Corporation in 2014. The 49% owner Albemarle Corporation is based in Charlotte, North Carolina and is one of the world's largest lithium producers.

The majority owner Tianqi Lithium Corporation is based in Chengdu, listed on the Shanghai stock exchange and is one of the world's largest lithium producers. As of 2018, the company controls more than 46% of the world's global production of lithium.[3] Tianqi Lithium Corporation is the 2nd largest lithium company in the world by revenue and the largest in China.[9]

The entity Windfield Holdings Pty Ltd (51% ownership) was established to purchase the mine and later 49% of its stock was sold. Windfield wholly owns Talison Lithium Pty Ltd the entity that owns and operates the Greenbushes lithium mine.[8]

Similarly, Albemarle owns their 49% stake in Windfield Pty Ltd through an entity known as RT Lithium. The mine was originally owned and built by Talison Lithium Pty Ltd that has been operating for over 128 years mining tin, tantalum, and lithium. The mine has been producing lithium concentrates for over 20 years, since 1983 when it became the world's first company to produce lithium concentrates from a hard-rock facility.[7]

The lithium production industry is dominated by only four companies – Talison, SQM, Albemarle and FMC. Geographically Australia, China and Chile also account for about 85% of global lithium production.[3]

Recent events[]

The joint venture partnership has come into turmoil recently due to Tianqi Corporation's well documented financial problems, exhibited in part by the fact that in March 2020, MSP Engineering Pty Ltd took Tianqi Lithium Kwinana – the entity that operates the Kwinana processing facility  – to the Supreme Court of Western Australia with a lawsuit claiming unpaid invoices of 35.9 million AUD.[12][13] Part of Tianqi's problems emerged from their recent purchase of 20% of Chilean lithium producer SQM.[9] The case is currently undergoing legal arbitration as of October 2020. SQM is also a Westfarmers partner in their new Kwinana processing facility. Westfarmers recently announced that they intend to continue with their plans for their facility despite the financial trouble of current producers.[14] They did however, delay the final investment decision on their Mount Holland lithium project to build a 45-thousand-tonne (99-million-pound) per annum lithium hydroxide processing facility until sometime in the first quarter of 2021.[14]

Tianqi ultimate parent notes in their financial disclosures that they may be forced to offload part of its 49% stake in the mine or the Kwinana processing facility nearby, Albemarle was named as a potential bidder.[9] While they have also delayed the expansion plans of their Kwinana plant.[15]

Albemarle has recently announced that they have delayed the start of construction of their Kemerton plant until sometime in 2021 and has scaled back growth plans due to lithium growing pains.[15] Although, demand for lithium-ion batteries has grown rapidly the lithium mining industries expansion has largely outpaced demand for lithium hydroxide.[16] As such lithium mining has proved less profitable than mining for other minerals that are also inputs for batteries such as cobalt.[16] Lithium is also relatively more abundant than other minerals that are seeing similar growth in demand.[16]

The Kwinana facility was due to be completed by 2019 however, financial constraints of their parent Tianqi and the COVID-19 outbreak have seen it still awaiting the commencement of production as of the end of 2020.[9]

References[]

  1. ^ a b c d e f Allday, A. (2020). Salt, Lithium and Other Mineral Mining in Australia. Sydney : IBIS World.
  2. ^ a b c d Partington, G. A.; McNaughton, N. J.; Williams, I. S. (1 May 1995). "A review of the geology, mineralization, and geochronology of the Greenbushes Pegmatite, Western Australia". Economic Geology. 90 (3): 616–635. doi:10.2113/gsecongeo.90.3.616. ISSN 1554-0774.
  3. ^ a b c d e Roskill. (2019). Lithium: Outlook to 2030, 17th Edition. London: Roskill.
  4. ^ a b c "Research & Insights | S&P Global". www.spglobal.com. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  5. ^ a b Martin, Gunther; Rentsch, Lars; Höck, Michael; Bertau, Martin (January 2017). "Lithium market research – global supply, future demand and price development". Energy Storage Materials. 6: 171–179. doi:10.1016/j.ensm.2016.11.004. ISSN 2405-8297.
  6. ^ "Making Money from The True Future of Lithium: Brine vs. Hard Rock". www.energyandcapital.com. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  7. ^ a b Boxall, Naomi J.; King, Sarah; Cheng, Ka Yu; Gumulya, Yosephine; Bruckard, Warren; Kaksonen, Anna H. (November 2018). "Urban mining of lithium-ion batteries in Australia: Current state and future trends". Minerals Engineering. 128: 45–55. doi:10.1016/j.mineng.2018.08.030. ISSN 0892-6875.
  8. ^ a b c S&P Global Market Intelligence. (2019, April 9). Essential Insights: Lithium Costs & Margins. Retrieved from S&P Global Market Intelligence: https://pages.marketintelligence.spglobal.com/Lithium-brine-vs-hard-rockdemo- confirmation-MJ-ad.html
  9. ^ a b c d e Tianqi Lithium Corporation. (2020). Consolidated Financial Statements for the period ended 31 December 2020. Chengdu: Tianqi Lithium Corporation.
  10. ^ a b IBIS World. (2018). Company Profile: Windfield Holdings Pty Ltd. Sydney: IBIS World.
  11. ^ "JORC : Mineral Resources and Ore Reserves". www.jorc.org. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  12. ^ "BarNet Jade - Find recent Australian legal decisions, judgments, case summaries for legal professionals (Judgments And Decisions Enhanced)". jade.io. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  13. ^ MSP Engineering Pty Ltd -v- Tianqi Lithium Kwinana Pty Ltd, WASC 25 (Supreme Court of Western Australia July 3, 2020).
  14. ^ a b "Wesfarmers boss keeps the faith in stalled lithium project". Australian Financial Review. 19 February 2020. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  15. ^ a b "Tianqi puts brakes on landmark WA lithium plant expansion". Australian Financial Review. 10 September 2019. Retrieved 19 November 2020.
  16. ^ a b c "Lithium and cobalt: A tale of two commodities | McKinsey". www.mckinsey.com. Retrieved 19 November 2020.

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