Market Notes · Lithium · Critical Minerals

Lithium Supply Chains: Brine, Hard Rock, and Recycling

Lithium comes from three main sources: South American brines, hard rock spodumene mines, and (eventually) battery recycling. Here is how the three streams differ.

Key takeaways
  • Today’s lithium supply is split between brine operations (mostly South America) and hard rock spodumene mining (mostly Australia and now China).
  • Battery recycling is a small but growing source.
  • Each route has different capital cost, operating cost, environmental footprint, and lead time.

What are the three lithium supply routes?

Lithium reaches the market through brine evaporation (in the Lithium Triangle of Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia), hard rock spodumene mining (primarily in Western Australia and now China and Canada), and battery recycling. Each route has a different cost structure, environmental footprint, and time to market.

Brine operations

Brine operations pump lithium-bearing salt water from underground reservoirs into large evaporation ponds. The process takes months and depends on solar and wind energy. Cost per tonne is generally low once a brine field is in production, but new projects require very long permitting and construction timelines and large land footprints.

Hard rock spodumene

Spodumene is a lithium-bearing mineral mined from hard rock, then concentrated and converted to lithium hydroxide or carbonate at a separate chemical plant (often in China). Hard rock projects can be built faster than brines and respond more quickly to price signals, but unit operating costs are typically higher.

Battery recycling

End-of-life batteries are an emerging source of lithium and other battery metals. Today recycling supplies a small share of demand because there are not yet enough end-of-life batteries to recycle. Over time recycling becomes more important as the installed EV base ages.

Implications for investors

Different supply routes have different risk profiles. Brine projects are typically slow, capital-intensive, and exposed to local water and permitting politics. Hard rock projects are more responsive but higher cost. Recycling is small now but a meaningful long-term source. Diversified exposure across routes spreads route-specific risk.

Comparing the three lithium supply routes
Route Typical geography Capital intensity Time to first production
Brine Chile, Argentina, Bolivia High Many years
Hard rock (spodumene) Australia, China, Canada Moderate to high Several years
Recycling OECD Moderate Limited by EOL battery availability

Frequently asked questions

Why is the Lithium Triangle important?
The Lithium Triangle (Chile, Argentina, Bolivia) holds a very large share of global identified lithium brine resources. Chile and Argentina are major producers. Bolivia has large resources but very limited production to date.
Is lithium a critical mineral?
Yes. Lithium appears on the critical mineral lists of the United States, Canada, and the European Union among others. It is considered strategic because of its role in lithium-ion batteries.
What is the difference between lithium carbonate and lithium hydroxide?
Both are chemical products used in lithium-ion batteries. Lithium hydroxide is generally preferred for higher-nickel cathode chemistries. Lithium carbonate is more common in lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries. Prices for the two have at times diverged significantly.
Sources

Public-domain summaries from the US Geological Survey, Natural Resources Canada, and the International Energy Agency.

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