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Critical Elements Lithium Corp V.CRE

Alternate Symbol(s):  CRECF

Critical Elements Lithium Corporation is a Canada-based lithium exploration company. The Company is engaged in the acquisition, exploration, development and processing of critical minerals mining properties in Canada. Its projects include Rose Lithium-Tantalum, Rose North, Rose South, Arques, Bourier, Dumulon, Duval, Nisk, Lemare, Caumont, and Valiquette. The Rose Lithium-Tantalum property consists of over 473 claims covering a total area of over 24.99 square kilometers (km2). It lies in the northeastern part of Superior Province, within the Eastmain greenstone belt. The Rose North property consists of about 31 claims covering a total area of over 16.14 km2. The Arques Property is composed of one block totaling around 136 claims covering an area of 6,840.93 hectares (ha) over 18 kilometers (kms) in length in a Southwest-Northeast direction. Bourier Property is comprised of over 304 claims with an area of 15,616.47 ha for over 30 kms. Rose South property consists of over 280 claims.


TSXV:CRE - Post by User

Post by Rinny1on May 20, 2022 4:43pm
168 Views
Post# 34699495

Chinese lockdowns halt lithium's record run

Chinese lockdowns halt lithium's record runhttps://financialpost.com/pmn/business-pmn/chinese-lockdowns-halt-lithiums-record-run

LONDON — Slowing demand in China due to COVID-19 restrictions has put the brakes on lithium’s red-hot rally to record highs, but long-term demand from makers of electric vehicle batteries is expected to sustain prices.

China’s “zero-COVID” policy means restrictions to limit infections are still in place, hobbling factory activity and disrupting supply chains.

 

Electric vehicle batteries can use lithium carbonate or lithium hydroxide, but the industry typically talks of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) which contains both.

Spot prices for lithium carbonate used in batteries in China were at $68,850 per tonne on May 11, according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, down from a record $79,550 in March.

 

Prices have more than doubled since the start of 2022.

 

“These very strict lockdowns in China have meant that many electric vehicle plants have ceased production, which in turn has reduced near term demand (for lithium),” said Benchmark Mineral Intelligence analyst Daisy Jennings-Grey.

 

She added supply was “still very tight and demand is robust.”

 

A surge in electric vehicle sales after previous lockdowns were lifted saw a scramble to secure battery raw materials which boosted prices.

 

But with lockdowns, some producers of battery materials in China have slashed production by 15-40%, reducing demand for materials such as lithium, state-backed research house Antaike said.
 

Consultancy Rho Motion has trimmed its 2022 electric vehicle sales forecast for China to 5.6 million units from 5.8 million previously. Globally about 10.3 million electric vehicles will be sold this year, it predicted.

 

Benchmark estimates demand for lithium carbonate equivalent at 685,000 tonnes this year, up from 545,000 tonnes last year, and a deficit of 80,000 tonne from a shortfall of 65,000 tonne in 2021.

 

Bank of America analysts raised their average price for lithium carbonate for this year by 34.2% to $75,829 per tonne, saying prices would be resilient despite higher production in Australia.

 

Large structural deficits will start to appear from 2030 onwards when demand for renewable energy vehicles surpasses 30% of overall sales, Wood Mackenzie analyst Gavin Montgomery said.

 

A supply response caused by higher prices will not be enough to plug those gaps, he said.

 

(Reporting by Zandi Shabalala Editing by Pratima Desai and Mark Potter)

 

 
 
 
 

 

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