Sales and manufacturing of electric cars are growing. Governments want to ban petrol and diesel cars. Electric cars need batteries. Batteries need lithium. There isn’t enough lithium available to meet demand. Portugal has lithium.
The price of lithium has quadrupled in the last year. While Chile, Australia, Argentina, and China are home to the world's highest lithium reserves, other countries also hold significant amounts. Chili holds the world’s largest reserves of lithium, but apart from any other consideration, Chili is a long way away from Europe, and transport alone adds a lot to the cost of delivery to Europe.
China holds massive reserves of lithium but mostly uses it for its own manufacturing of batteries.
Where to find lithium in Europe?
Portugal is believed to sit on some of Europe's biggest lithium deposits and as a result has been picked for Europe's biggest lithium mining and treatment plant.
Compare to other countries with large deposits of lithium
United States — 750,000 MT.
Canada — 530,000 MT.
Zimbabwe — 220,000 MT.
Brazil — 95,000 MT.
Portugal — 60,000 MT.
It’s obvious why Portugal holds a unique advantage for supplying Europe. A UK based mining company Savannah proposed to join forces with Galp to explore what they said will be Europe’s largest lithium mine in Mina do Barroso. This project seems now to be wholly owned by Savannah as Galp did not take up an option they had rights to.
The Mina do Barroso Lithium Project is located in northern Portugal approximately 145 km northeast of Porto and the industrial port of Leixões. Having taken an initial 75 percent stake in the Project in May 2017, Savannah has subsequently become its sole owner and expanded the Project, adding the adjacent, 3 block, ‘Aldeia’ Mining Lease Application to the original granted Mina do Barroso Mining Lease, valid until 2036, (extendable for 20 years). The Project is now well established as Western Europe’s most significant lithium project.
Fierce opposition to the mine
Opposition to the lithium mine has been very strong, but Savannah, advises that its’ wholly owned subsidiary, Savannah Lithium Lda., has been joined as the counter-interested party in litigation brought by the Parish of Covas do Barroso as plaintiff in the Mirandela Fiscal and Administrative Court against the Republic of Portugal and the Ministry of Economy as defendants. The C-100 Mining Lease which contains the Barroso Lithium Project is fully authorised, has a term of 30 years to 2036 and remains in good standing. The advice from Savannah’s lawyers is that the claim is without foundation and will be challenged by Savannah as the counter-interested party alongside exploring all potential options, including making a claim for damages against the plaintiff.
What are the objections to lithium mining in Portugal?
The idyllic landscape near the village of Covas do Barroso is the site of the new open cast lithium mines. Needless to say the local residents are up in arms, in fairness, so would I be if it was near my property. We are all ‘NIMBYS’ at heart (not in my back yard). The chairman of a local action group, Nelson Gomes, says the plan is to mine lithium here in four locations initially. "There will be huge mine dumps, and rivers will be redirected." "The whole landscape and its ecological balance will be destroyed." The group's motto "Yes to life, no to the mine" is seen hanging on more and more facades and traffic signs. "We've been involved in sustainable farming for centuries," Gomes said. "We're small family-run businesses, keeping afloat without much help from the state — and we're not going to give this up just like that; we'll fight against the mine right until the end."
He may well be right, but this project is too important to the Portuguese economy to be ignored. According to Nuno Forner from the environmental pressure group Zero, foreign companies are interested in mining lithium in Portugal, but less so in refining the mined metal locally. That is no longer factual.
What about the processing of lithium in Portugal?
Once mined lithium needs to be processed and this is where Galp is clearly focusing its efforts. They have formed a joint venture with the Swedish company Northvolt. It’s clear that the lithium needs to be processed in Portugal, not exported for other countries to benefit from Portugal’s ‘white gold’.
Swedish battery storage company Northvolt and Galp have agreed to set up a joint venture called Aurora with the goal to build Europe’s largest and most sustainable integrated lithium conversion plant. The facility in Portugal is set to have an initial annual output capacity of up to 35,000 tonnes of battery grade lithium hydroxide, a material needed in the production of lithium-ion batteries.
That will be sufficient for batteries in about 700,000 electric vehicles.
Galp and Northvolt are still searching for the best site for their lithium conversion plant, which they envisage to start commercial operations in 2026, pending a final investment decision. Some report suggested that Sines was the preferred location, but other locations nearer the mines are under consideration. The plant could represent an investment of about €700m and create up to 1,500 direct and indirect jobs.
Reality check
It doesn’t take a financial genius to see the obvious facts. Vehicles are going electric. They need batteries, batteries need lithium. Portugal has one of the largest reserved of lithium in Europe. The Barroso Project will produce enough lithium each year for approximately 0.5 million electric vehicle battery packs. Local people will protest, I don’t blame them, but it’s going to happen.
Portugal has ‘white gold’ and Europe wants it.
Resident in Portugal for 50 years, publishing and writing about Portugal since 1977. Privileged to have seen, firsthand, Portugal progress from a dictatorship (1974) into a stable democracy.
If Portugal has a lithium deposit of 60,000 mt (metric ton) and the lithium conversion plant will have an initial (!) annual output capacity of up to 35,000 tonnes of battery grade lithium hydroxide those 1,500 direct and indirect jobs will end after 2 years. Stop. Battery Grade, so maybe after max 6 months. That is what I call a Reality CHECK ...
It indeed doesn’t take a financial genius to see the obvious facts.
By Wilfried from Algarve on 18 Feb 2022, 23:59
Just no! Another ecological disaster in the making. Replacing one pollutant for another just to appease the eco mob is madness. Retooling and job losses in the ICE industry will cost billions to just shift the pollution in to other aspects of life.
By Ian from Lisbon on 19 Feb 2022, 06:58
All about greed. There is nothing green about a green car. Digging a hole, extracting, raping and poisoning the environment, then digging a hole somewhere else in a few years and getting rid of the defunct battery. At least one country had the courage to say no!
By Diana Krogh from Beiras on 19 Feb 2022, 10:32
I've sympathy with the locals but this is a no brainer. Too good an opportunity for the country to pass up.
By BD Condell from Algarve on 19 Feb 2022, 11:12
Lithium mining has devastated vast areas of China already. Areas, known as the 'Black Lakes' are so poisoned with the byproducts of the extraction processes (mostly by the evaporation technique) that no living creature survives in the lakes any more. Do we really want that in Portugal? This is a business run by billionaires, for profit, who don't care about the environmental impact.
By Russell Taylor from Other on 19 Feb 2022, 21:03
Former environmental secretary, the university professor Joaquim Poças Martins argued recently that the way forward for Portugal is developing ‘green hydrogen’ as a clean alternative energy source.
His widely reported soundbite, “You cannot destroy a mountain in order to extract a few kilos of lithium” has stuck a cord with protestors and has been ignored by the Minister for the Destruction of the Environment, João Pedro Matos Fernandes who remains bedazzled by the claims of Savannah Resources and its slick PR output.
Martins states that “in half a dozen years” the lithium deposits identified in Portugal may well have run dry and another reader points out that the figures point to just 6-months of extraction before the miners move on.
Martins, from Porto University’s hydraulics, water resources and environment section of the Engineering Faculty, the increasing use of offshore photovoltaic and eolic energy, should further be developed.
João Pedro Matos Fernandes states that lithium extraction is inevitable as it’s “essential for decarbonisation,” failing to address the green lobby that states that it is not inevitable at all and that locals should be taken into account in addition to the destruction of Portugal’s outstanding landscape.
It's interesting that Luckman is expressing his pro-lithium opinion in the Portugal News but he must expect an equal and opposite reaction.
By Paul Rees from Lisbon on 19 Feb 2022, 22:12
Not mining the Lithium because of NIMBY environmental concerns would be such a mistake. We need Lithium to make the clean energy transition happen, and what better for Portugal and for Europe than for it to come from domestic sources? It would be myopic and small not to do this.
By Fisher Lanham from Other on 21 Feb 2022, 12:34
I live in one of the six new areas that have been chosen for exploration for new mining concessions for lithium in the north of the country (the Seixoso-Vieros concession, a few kilometres south of the Barroso mine). What is planned is a short term open cast mining operation which will devastate some stunning scenery and, more importantly, destroy excellent farmland that has been continuously farmed for at least 3,000 years. The water table is unlikely to survive, threatening the towns and villages as well as the farms. In this way, the two of the main local industries, farming and tourism, will be wiped out - for what? A couple of years worth of high profits for some off-shore businessmen and a handful of temporary jobs for the locals. No wonder we're up in arms about it.
By Fitch O'Connell from Other on 21 Feb 2022, 22:22
Maybe I'm missing something. Electric cars need to be charged by electricity which is probably generated by either nuclear power or fossil fuels. So where's the green come from?
By Tony B from USA on 22 Feb 2022, 18:40
Four of the 13 commentaries made last week have been deleted. Could they please be restored.
By Cavaleiro R. from Other on 02 Mar 2022, 09:57