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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Electric car lithium demand powers mining revival in Britain

Cornish Lithium is at a testing stage to see if the metal can be produced commercially to meet growing demand from the electric car sector. — AFP
Cornish Lithium is at a testing stage to see if the metal can be produced commercially to meet growing demand from the electric car sector. — AFP
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LONDON As the global auto sector accelerates production of electric cars, one British company is hoping to cash in from mining lithium needed to make rechargeable batteries that power the vehicles.


It is five years since former investment banker Jeremy Wrathall launched Cornish Lithium, a firm in Cornwall.


And while it may be another four years until it begins commercial production of the metal, Wrathall is optimistic that his punt will pay dividends.


“In 2016, I started to think about the electric vehicle revolution and what that would mean for metal demand and I started to think about lithium,” he said in an interview.


“A friend of mine mentioned lithium being identified in Cornwall and I just wondered if that was a sort of an unrecognised thing in the UK.” In fact lithium was discovered in Cornwall in 1864, while the area is known for its historic copper and tin mining, which dates back 4,000 years and ended at the turn of the century.


“Of course I would like to revive mining in Cornwall but this a commercial project,” insisted Wrathall. “It’s not a mission that drives me to the point to be emotional or romantic.” Cornish Lithium is at a testing stage to see if the metal can be produced commercially.


“Initial results are encouraging. I’m excited about it,” Wrathall said, whose company has revived a former mine situated away from the area’s picturesque villages .


The mining firm is looking to extract enough lithium from hot water underground to meet at least a “significant proportion” of UK demand, while at the same time respecting the environment.


It is mulling the capture of heat from underground to generate clean power, or geothermal energy, that can be used to extract the lithium.


Wrathall explained that Cornwall benefitted from having very clean water. “It has a lot of lithium and very little of anything else,” he explained.


“When you’re looking for needles in a haystack you want as little hay as possible and more needle and that’s what we’ve got.” — AFP


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