someone likes lithium Just within the Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) family alone, lithium batteries are used to power iPads, iPods and iPhones. Even the MacBook Pro line of laptops uses advanced lithium-polymer batteries that are ultra-slim and capable of running 10 hours on a single charge.
All told, the global production of handheld lithium batteries rose 27% last year to 3.9 billion units. And this year, the total is expected to climb to 4.5 billion units.
Now, you may be thinking lithium's already seen its heyday. After all, Apple can only sell so many more iPhones and iPads. The developed world has been exposed to high-tech consumer electronics for a few years now.
But electronic gadgets are just one of the sources of demand for lithium. There's another major use for lithium and I think it's going to be the most powerful demand driver yet.
That's cars, but more specifically electric cars.
Lithium-based batteries are used in the production of hybrid/electric vehicles like the Chevy Volt and the Nissan Leaf. As more consumers trade in their gas-guzzling SUVs in exchange for these fuel-efficient alternatives, demand for lithium could be greatly augmented.
For every plug-in hybrid that rolls off the assembly line, it's going to take roughly 20 pounds of lithium to make it run. By comparison, it takes one ounce of lithium to make a laptop and a 10th of an ounce for a cell-phone. This means every electric car produced will need 320 times more lithium than a laptop and 3,200 times more than a cell phone.
And right now, the market for electric cars is still in its infancy. The high costs associated with owning an electric vehicle have deterred consumers for years. But thanks to President Obama, that's about to change.
In an attempt to get 1 million electric vehicles on the road by 2015, Congress has offered a $7,500 tax credit to anyone willing to buy a new electric car.
If that's not enough to spur interest, Uncle Sam has also dished out $2.4 billion for battery development and $25 billion to help get automakers on board.
That cash has greased the wheels and provided ample incentive to get lithium-laden electric vehicles from the research-and-development stage to the showroom floor. Automakers already plan to introduce 42 new electric models in 2012.
And that's just the United States, there is even more potential overseas...
In fact, China will likely overtake the United States and become the world's largest electric vehicle producer by 2020.
Due to heavy government subsidies spurring consumer demand, Beijing intends to deploy $1.5 billion annually in the next decade to speed up the transition. For its part, Hong Kong is tripling the number of public recharging stations by next summer. Within the next few years, 500,000 electric vehicles could be rolling out of Chinese assembly lines annually.
All-in-all, the global lithium-ion transportation battery industry could soar more than 800%, from revenue of $878 million last year to $8 billion by 2015, according to Pike Research, a market-research and consulting firm.
These are some big numbers. Anytime you see revenue measured in millions moving to revenue in the billions, something big is happening...
Action to Take --> As market penetration rates rise, global production of electric/hybrid vehicles could surpass 200 million units per year by 2020. That's a lot of car batteries -- and yet another reason why the world has become increasingly hungry for lithium.
article by Nathan Slaughter