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Lifthium, a Portuguese company, wins a grant of $210 million for reprocessing lithium

Lifthium Energy, a Portuguese company, has received a 180-million-euro ($210 million) grant from the government to build a lithium refinery for the rapidly growing electric vehicle battery market in Portugal's north.

Portugal, with 60,000 metric tons of reserves, is Europe's largest lithium producer. It supplies mainly ceramics. It is only now that it has sought to produce lithium for batteries.

The company stated that the grant, which is non-refundable, was awarded in accordance with the Temporary Crisis Framework of the European Union (which allows state incentives to accelerate the green and industrial transformation).

The refinery will be built in Estarreja (northern Portugal), about 50 km south of Porto.

Bondalti, Portugal’s largest chemical producer, has already established sites in the region, and Lifthium plans to start operations there by 2030.

Duarte Braga, CEO of Lifthium, said that the project is progressing "with rigour" and "prudence" as the industrial environment in Europe and the lithium market have become more challenging during the last two years.

He said that the public incentive is important, but now the focus was on finding a strategic partner as well as establishing market and financing conditions prior to a final investment decision.

He said that Lifthium could build another refinery, in addition to Estarreja, in Spain.

The company aims to refine 50,000 tons per year of lithium?hydroxide. This is enough to provide batteries for 2 million electric vehicles.

The government is hoping to launch a long-delayed bid for prospecting licenses in lithium this year. This is seen as crucial to building up a domestic value chain of lithium and reducing Europe's dependence on imports, including from China.

(source: Reuters)