Batteries News

Chinese lithium firm reaches milestone in Mali mine project despite strict new rules

chinese lithium mine

Chinese lithium firm reaches milestone in Mali mine project despite strict new rules

Chinese company Ganfeng Lithium has completed a major lithium processing plant in Mali – defying security challenges, a strict new mining code and a lithium supply market glut.

China’s largest lithium producer, Ganfeng announced that the first phase of its Goulamina lithium mine, in the southern region of Bougouni, had gone live in mid-December. It has a planned annual capacity to produce 506,000 tonnes of lithium, which will grow to 1 million tonnes in the second phase.

Considered one of the world’s largest deposits of the critical mineral, it is estimated that the mine could be explored for more than 23 years, producing 15.6 million tonnes of spodumene concentrate over that period.

Do you have questions about the biggest topics and trends from around the world? Get the answers with SCMP Knowledge, our new platform of curated content with explainers, FAQs, analyses and infographics brought to you by our award-winning team.

Lithium is a key component in batteries for electric vehicles and electronics.

At the launch of the plant, Mali’s transitional President Assimi Goita described his country’s cooperation with China as a “strategic and sincere” partnership. Goita said the lithium mine is extremely important for the West African nation and the launch of the processing plant “marks a significant step forward in the exploitation of the country’s natural resources”.

Chinese ambassador to Mali Chen Zhihong, who attended the inauguration ceremony, said the Goulamina mine “is a new example of win-win cooperation”.

Ganfeng bought a 40 per cent stake in the Goulamina lithium mine from Australian firm Leo Lithium in May. The deal came after a new mining code introduced in 2023 stipulated that the Malian government was entitled to a 10 per cent free carry stake and could also acquire an additional 25 per cent.

At the time, Leo Lithium said the risks of operating in Mali were not worth the potential future financial returns, considering the amount from the project that could end up going to the Mali government under the new code.

In line with the mining code, Mali recently announced a plan to acquire a 35 per cent stake in the Goulamina mine – of which 10 per cent would be granted free of charge and an additional 25 per cent would be bought. When completed, Ganfeng Lithium will indirectly hold a 65 per cent stake in the project, with the rest going to the Mali government.

Adam Megginson, a senior analyst at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, said the start of production at Goulamina is another indication of the leading role that China is playing in developing capacity in the continent.

Megginson said part of what makes Chinese investment so compelling is that it tends to come with knowledge, workers and equipment from China, which already boasts a highly developed critical minerals processing ecosystem. By contrast, he said, capital from elsewhere lacks the integration with an established downstream supply chain with relevant expertise that China has.

Megginson said,

It is becoming clear that a large proportion of the projects that have managed to come online outside of China are owned or operated by Chinese entities,

The Malian junta is banking on the mine to boost its economy and has welcomed Chinese investments – even as companies from the West have retreated from the country following the 2020 military coup that overthrew former president Ibrahim Boubacar Keita.

China is currently ahead of its Western rivals in the race for critical minerals as part of the global green energy transition. Chinese companies have been investing in African mines as a result, such as multibillion-dollar investments in lithium mining operations in Zimbabwe.

Chinese companies have been investing in African mines to secure critical minerals for the global green energy transition, such as multibillion-dollar investments in lithium mining operations in Zimbabwe. This has placed Beijing ahead of its Western rivals in the race to these minerals.

Besides the Goulamina lithium mine, another Chinese company Hainan Mining, part of Fosun Group, has a 51 per cent stake in the Bougouni Lithium Project in southern Mali, 180km south of the capital, Bamako.

Chris Berry, president of US-based commodities advisory firm House Mountain Partners, said:

It would seem that only Chinese companies are willing to shoulder the risks associated with doing business in Africa including partial or entire asset expropriation.

However, Megginson said, that is not to say that the Malian government or its citizens should not share in the country’s mineral wealth. They should, but contracts should be honoured no matter who is in charge in the government.

He said the production in Mali and Zimbabwe will certainly add supply,

But in some ways are complicating matters as the lithium market is currently suffering from an oversupply situation.

Megginson said Benchmark is forecasting the lithium market to be in a relative equilibrium in 2025.

This article originally appeared in the South China Morning Post (SCMP), the most authoritative voice reporting on China and Asia for more than a century. For more SCMP stories, please explore the SCMP app or visit the SCMP’s Facebook and Twitter pages. Copyright © 2024 South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

Copyright (c) 2024. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

READ the latest Batteries News shaping the battery market

Chinese lithium firm reaches milestone in Mali mine project despite strict new rules, source

batteries news

Get our LinkedIn updates!

Join our weekly newsletter!

Follow us

Don't be shy, get in touch. We love meeting interesting people and making new friends.