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Lithos Group Ltd N.LITS

Alternate Symbol(s):  LITSF

Lithos Group Ltd., formerly Lithos Energy Ltd., is engaged in delivering sustainable lithium. The Company offers AcQUA, which is a patent-pending technology that spans the complete value chain from the conditioning and pre-treatment of raw brines through the direct lithium extraction (DLE) phase into the polishing and purification of battery grade lithium feedstock. The Company has two processing facilities: a 4,000 square feet (sq ft) lab in Denver, Colorado and a 55,000 sq ft complex in Bessemer, Alabama. The Company is engaged in a contract with multiple strategic mineral resource owners and processing brines from the Salars in Chile and Argentina, and the Smackover reservoir in the Southeastern United States. The Company’s wholly owned subsidiary is Aqueous Resources LLC.


NEO:LITS - Post by User

Post by graphiteon Jun 27, 2023 3:43pm
170 Views
Post# 35517014

Major Oil Baron looking and getting involved in DLE!!!

Major Oil Baron looking and getting involved in DLE!!!Alchemist has the DLE technology that may have major value to these Oil Baron's.

Oil and gas majors step up efforts to diversify into lithium Groups pin hopes on technological breakthrough to produce metal critical for electric car transition The Silver Peak lithium mine in Nevada, US. Oil companies have so far allocated just a fraction of the capital they spend on fossil fuel production to investment in the metal © Marli Miller/UCG/Universal Images Group via Getty Images Oil and gas majors step up efforts to diversify into lithium on twitter (opens in a new window) Oil and gas majors step up efforts to diversify into lithium on facebook (opens in a new window) Oil and gas majors step up efforts to diversify into lithium on linkedin (opens in a new window) Oil and gas majors step up efforts to diversify into lithium on whatsapp (opens in a new window) Save Harry Dempsey in London and Derek Brower in New York JUNE 25 2023 41 Print this page Receive free Oil & Gas industry updates We’ll send you a myFT Daily Digest email rounding up the latest Oil & Gas industry news every morning. Oil and gas majors are stepping up efforts to break into lithium to diversify beyond fossil fuels as hopes rise over a technological breakthrough to produce the metal critical for electric car batteries. ExxonMobil, Schlumberger, Occidental Petroleum and Equinor are exploring whether their core skills of pumping, processing and reinjecting underground fluids such as oil and water could be deployed to process lithium from unconventional brine resources, helping to ease forecast shortages of a material expected to be vital for the energy transition. “There are a number of oil and gas majors putting a lot of time and attention into how they can become big in lithium,” said Brian Menell, chief executive of TechMet, a mining investment fund backed by the US government. TechMet has a stake in EnergySource Minerals (ESM), a lithium developer backed by oilfield services giant Schlumberger. “It’s a natural evolution for oil companies. Lithium brines are an obvious one as unlike charging networks and wind farms, where they have no skills besides project management, they are skilled at subsurface pumping and fluids.” The potential push into lithium comes as producers from Exxon and Chevron in the US to Equinor and BP in Europe try to remain profitable amid a global effort to curb emissions and transition from fossil fuels to cleaner energy. Oil majors’ drive into lithium would reassure automakers that at present rely on small, unproven miners to deliver the vast quantities of lithium needed to electrify their vehicles in the coming decade as western countries ban sales of new petrol and diesel cars and as electric vehicle use soars in China. But the oil companies’ activity to date has been speculative, involving a small fraction of the capital spent on fossil fuel production each year and limited to buying rights to prospective lithium resources, taking minority stakes in lithium companies through venture arms and licensing extraction technology. ExxonMobil recently paid more than $100mn in cash to acquire oilfield brines containing lithium in the Smackover area of Arkansas, fending off interest from Schlumberger and Equinor, according to two people familiar with the matter. Equinor took a stake in developer Lithium de France in 2021, while US shale producer Occidental jointly owns TerraLithium, a lithium technology group, and Chevron’s chief executive has also expressed interest in the battery metal. Supply growth of lithium in recent years has been driven by the rise of Australian and Chinese hard-rock resources, which have added to Latin America’s brines that are the other key source of the battery metal. However, brine’s future contribution — and the involvement of the oil majors — hinges on the commercial development of direct lithium extraction (DLE), a technology unproven at scale that selectively takes the silvery-white mineral out of salty mixtures using membranes, filters or beads. At present, lithium found in the brine beneath salt-encrusted land, known as salar, in South America is extracted through evaporation ponds that in effect strip out every element besides lithium. DLE does the opposite and Goldman Sachs says it is a “potentially game-changing technology” — lithium’s equivalent of fracking for oil. It would speed up lithium extraction from months to days, while average recovery rates of 60 to 80 per cent compared with 40 to 60 per cent for ponds could make lower concentration resources economically viable. Success for DLE, which has been used in Argentina by Livent since 1998 and in a handful of projects in Qinghai, China, would open the possibility of oil majors extracting lithium from wastewater at oilfields and at geothermal energy projects that have brine on site. Oil consultancy Enverus recently described the “potential multibillion bonanza” awaiting DLE investors in the Permian Basin in Texas and New Mexico, which is already the world’s most prolific oilfield. In one section alone, wastewater used in shale fracking could produce 225,000 tonnes of lithium carbonate a year, worth $19bn of revenue, Enverus calculated. DLE projects are also under way in Nevada and Utah. In western Canada’s oil-rich Alberta, Imperial Oil, majority owned by Exxon, has joined a DLE venture with E3 Lithium. Investors in US lithium mining and processing would qualify for subsidies included in the Inflation Reduction Act passed last year. Canada has also allocated generous tax breaks to the nascent sector. Despite the natural transfer of oil companies’ skills to such resources, the complexity of getting battery-grade materials approved by the automakers and the small size of the market might not make it worth the effort. Recommended Commodities Lithium’s shale oil moment Even on optimistic growth and pricing assumptions, lithium could grow to $150bn a year by 2030 versus the current $2.6tn oil market, according to Financial Times calculations. With the exception of Rio Tinto, the small market size has even been a hurdle for mining majors making a big bet on the lithium sector. The potential market for the oil majors would be a sliver of the total lithium market. Ahmed Mehdi, an adviser at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence who consults oil and gas companies on their lithium strategies, said DLE’s contribution to lithium supply could grow from 10 per cent at present to 15 to 20 per cent by 2030. Some industry insiders predict that the early-stage activities could pave the way for a bigger leap into significant production of the battery metal. “There are a couple of companies looking to establish a much stronger foothold in the lithium space through M&A, greenfield projects or doubling down on the resources of produced water they do have,” said Eric Spomer, chief executive of ESM, which plans to supply Ford. Oil companies’ interest goes beyond the brine produced as a byproduct of oil production. Equinor said it was “closely” following the technology and market developments for lithium extraction from geothermal brines, another renewable energy business that oil companies want to invest in. Vulcan Energy Resources, backed by Peugeot owner Stellantis, is developing a geothermal lithium project in Germany’s Rhine Valley and is in talks with oil and gas companies to partner on the geothermal and DLE parts of the project. “Whether it’s BP, Shell, Eni, Exxon or Equinor — they are all looking at it,” said Vulcan’s deputy chief executive Cris Moreno, referring to the lithium sector.
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