Lithium-rich countries risk missing the electric batteries boom

Foto: sxc.hu

The need is expected to triple by 2025

As Tesla Motors begins to build the world’s largest lithium-ion battery in Australia and other vehicle makers such as Volvo get on board the electric vehicles train, concerns are rising over the environmental footprint of mining that and other materials used in car batteries, as well as their eventual disposal.

“One of the challenges of making battery recycling economically viable is the quantity of battery material that is needed to keep utilisation rates of recycling facilities sufficiently high,” say analysts at Morgan Stanley. “The risk, therefore, is there may not be the necessary infrastructure in place in time for the first significant wave of EV batteries to reach end of life,” Financial Times reports.

The need for the metal is expected to triple by 2025, but no all the countries rich in lithium are taking advantage of the boom.