Portugal to build Europe’s biggest lithium plant

Aim is to produce enough battery-grade lithium hydroxide annually to power 700,000 electric vehicles

A planned  lithium processing plant in Portugal hopes to supply enough battery-grade lithium hydroxide every year to power 700,000 electric vehicles. Photograph: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg
A planned lithium processing plant in Portugal hopes to supply enough battery-grade lithium hydroxide every year to power 700,000 electric vehicles. Photograph: Tomohiro Ohsumi/Bloomberg

Portuguese oil and gas company Galp is joining forces with Swedish battery start-up Northvolt to develop Europe's largest lithium processing plant as part of a shift away from fossil fuels.

The 50-50 joint venture called Aurora will target annual production of 35,000 tonnes of battery-grade lithium hydroxide, enough for 50 GWh of battery capacity, which could power about 700,000 electric vehicles.

The plant will be in Portugal, the site of western Europe's largest lithium deposit, with total investment of up to €700 million, "based on similar projects", and creating as many 1,500 jobs, the companies said.

The joint venture hopes to source the lithium for the project from the Iberian peninsula and is aiming to use renewable energy to power the refinery, which is aiming to start commercial operations in 2026 once a final investment decision is taken.

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"This is a once-in-a-generation opportunity to reposition Europe as a leader in an industry that will be vital to bringing down global CO2 emissions," said Galp's chief executive Andy Brown.

Galp, already one of the biggest solar power generators in Spain and Portugal, is seeking to cut investment in fossil fuels in favour of cleaner energy, partly in response to pressure from investors.

Demand for lithium, a vital material for electric vehicle batteries, is forecast to grow by as much as 4,000 per cent by 2040, according to the International Energy Agency. A typical electric vehicle battery pack contains about 8kg of lithium.

However, Europe and the US have very little domestic processing capacity.

In a report this year, the US Department of Energy said China refined 60 per cent of the world's lithium and its dominance presented a "critical vulnerability to the future of the US domestic auto industry".

The price of lithium has soared this year as supply struggles to keep pace with rising demand. An index of lithium carbonate and hydroxide prices compiled by Benchmark Mineral Intelligence has risen 240 per cent this year.

Northvolt, which is backed by investors including Goldman Sachs, BMW and Ikea, is the most advanced of a series of battery start-ups in Europe. It will open its first factory in northern Sweden this month and has an extensive partnership with German carmaker Volkswagen. It has agreed to purchase half of the joint venture's production for use in its battery manufacturing. – Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2021