Europe’s embryonic lithium mining industry digs deeper to meet demand

For 47 years, a chemicals producer in London’s commuter belt has been running a small lithium refinery that’s the only one of its kind in Europe. Now Leverton Lithium is expanding as the rush to secure supplies of the key battery metal intensifies.

The pivotal role of lithium-ion batteries in the electric-vehicle revolution is driving the construction of about half a dozen refinery projects across Europe. At the same time, the strategic importance of those developments has been underlined by the European Union’s initiative to cut its dependence on China for critical raw materials.

Lithium ore falls from a chute onto a stockpile at the Bald Hill lithium mine site, co-owned by Tawana Resources Ltd. and Alliance Mineral Assets Ltd., outside of Widgiemooltha, Australia. Now, demand for the mineral powering EV batteries is exploding in Europe.

Lithium prices surged last year as electric-vehicle demand took off, creating bonanza margins for miners and refiners. While prices have fallen sharply over the past few months, European refinery executives are confident the boom in demand will create a lucrative market that’s big enough to accommodate all of the projects under construction.

“Every Western automaker has a lot of interest in our product,” Dirk Harbeke, chief executive officer of Rock Tech Lithium, said in a Bloomberg TV interview. “We assume that by the end of this decade we will need around 10 converters of the size that we are currently building.”

On Monday, Rock Tech Lithium broke ground on its refinery in Brandenburg, Germany, which is set to come online in 2025. About 115 miles away in Bitterfeld, AMG Advanced Metallurgical said it will begin producing lithium hydroxide in the fourth quarter of this year, initially with an annual output that’s enough for 500,000 electric vehicle batteries. That would make it the first lithium refinery in mainland Europe.

“Everyone is now trying to get hold of these materials,” said Heinz Schimmelbusch, AMG’s CEO.

At an industrial port in the northeast of the United Kingdom, Tees Valley Lithium and Green Lithium are planning to build two separate refineries within a few miles of each other. In Finland — a critical industrial hub in Europe’s nascent battery supply chain — South African miner Sibanye Stillwater Ltd. is building a $616 million refinery.