Canadian company seeks new source for lithium, a key battery ingredient RSS Feed

Canadian company seeks new source for lithium, a key battery ingredient

A Canadian company is hoping to bridge the gap between the old economy and the new economy.

MGX Minerals of Vancouver, British Columbia, is raising capital to fund the development of its “PetroLithium” technology that it says can turn wastewater into a green energy source.

Specifically, the company is ramping up operations to extract lithium and other metals from the waste water produced by oil and gas drilling operations. The “irony” is that “lithium is the basis of the new economy,” says Jared Lazerson, president and CEO of MGX.

As the costs of lithium-ion batteries have dropped, the price of lithium, the main ingredient in those batteries has risen. Lithium spot market prices have roughly tripled over the last three years or so, hitting roughly $20,000/ton, said Alex Laugharne, principal consultant at CRU Group, a consultancy specializing on metals, mining and fertilizer industries.

The price rise is mostly driven by growing demand for electric vehicle batteries. But the higher cost is not usually passed directly on to consumers as manufacturers buy their supplies under long-term contracts that often price the metal at prices as much as half the of spot market prices. But spot prices have been high enough to spur production and attract new entrants.

Most raw lithium comes from South America, which accounts for about 60% of global supply, followed by Australia, which produces most of the rest.

In Australia, Tailson Lithium recently announced a $320 million expansion that will double its output of to 1.34 million tonnes of lithium concentrate by 2019.

MGX, meanwhile, hopes to begin ramping up production and recently acquired mineral rights in Utah’s Paradox Basin. Lazerson says the area has some of the richest in lithium brine deposits in North America, essentially the underground remains of ancient seas. He says MGX could also hit oil or gas when drilling for lithium, which would mitigate the risk of drilling a dry hole.

MGX’s core business, though, is handling waste water for oil and gas drilling operations. The water has to be separated from the hydrocarbons that are pumped from the Earth. The water is actually brine and contains minerals such as lithium and magnesium. Historically drilling companies injected the water back into the ground or held it in tanks, but both options are coming under increasing scrutiny and criticism.

“Water handling has become the bane of the existence for oil and gas companies,” said Lazerson. He says MGX has come up with a process for separating out the usable metals that leaves “near-potable” water and is faster and more efficient than the traditional evaporation process.

The company is exploring business models that will enable it to derive multiple revenue streams from its extraction process, including being paid to clean up the water, possibly recycling the water, and selling the lithium and other metals.

Read full article at Utility Dive