Judge refuses to block Nevada lithium mine that GM is backing

Reno, Nev. — A federal judge has ordered the government to revisit part of its environmental review of a lithium mine planned in Nevada that has General Motors Co. as a partner but denied opponents’ effort to block the project at the nation’s largest known lithium source.

The ruling late Monday marks a significant victory for Canada-based Lithium Americas Corp. at its subsidiary’s project near the Oregon line, as well as for GM, which said last week it would make a $650 million equity investment in Lithium Americas. It’s a setback for conservationists, tribes and a Nevada rancher who’ve been fighting it for two years.

President Joe Biden’s administration says the mine is key to producing raw materials for electric vehicle batteries to help speed the nation’s transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy.

In this Sept. 13, 2018, photo, Melissa Boerst, a Lithium Nevada Corp. geologist, points to an area of future exploration from a drill site at the Thacker Pass Project in Humboldt County, Nev. General Motors Co. has conditionally agreed to invest $650 million in Lithium Americas Corp. in a deal that will give GM exclusive access to the first phase of a mine planned near the Nevada-Oregon line with the largest known source of lithium in the U.S.

“The favorable ruling leaves in place the final regulatory approval needed in moving Thacker Pass into construction,” Jonathan Evans, Lithium Americas’ president and CEO, said in a statement Tuesday. The company expects production to begin in the second half of 2026.

GM’s deal with Lithium Americas gives the Detroit automaker exclusive access to the first phase of the Thacker Pass mine. The equity investment is contingent on the project clearing the final environmental and legal challenges it faces in federal court in Reno.

The Bureau of Land Management approved the project in January 2021. A rancher, conservationists and tribes started filing lawsuits opposing it weeks later.

Spokespersons for the plaintiffs said they were considering whether to appeal the ruling. They said they will keep trying to find other ways to block the project.

“We don’t intend to stop fighting this destructive project,” Greta Anderson of the Western Watersheds Project said Tuesday in an email to the Associated Press.

Will Falk, a lawyer for the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony, said in an email Tuesday that “American law priorities mining on public lands over all other users — including Native American spiritual uses.”

“Until that changes, law will be a limited tactic in protecting public land and Native American sacred places,” he said.

In a 49-page ruling late Monday, U.S. District Judge Miranda Du in Reno concluded opponents had failed to prove the overall project would harm wildlife habitat, degrade groundwater or pollute the air.