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Zimbabwe plans to start construction of a new $270 million lithium plant in 2019.

Zimbabwe plans to start construction of a new $270 million lithium plant in 2019.

Trevor Barnard, the CEO of Zimbabwe's Kuvimba Mining House, said that construction on a $270-million lithium concentration plant will begin in the third quarter this year at Sandawana Mine. The plant is expected to be completed in early 2027.

The state-owned miner will partner with two Chinese metals titans to build a lithium concentrator capable of producing 600,000 tons per year. The two companies will construct and operate the plant in a minimum five-year period before returning it to Kuvimba. Barnard refused to identify the companies citing ongoing discussions.

Barnard, a reporter, said: "We're still working on finalising a few agreements and making sure that our partner has all the industry conditions necessary for them to begin construction."

He added, "We're looking to break ground in the third-quarter."

Kuvimba has been hauling some lithium ore to Gwanda's processing plant, owned by Chinese nickel-and-steel giant Tsingshan Group.

Barnard stated that the completion date of the Sandawana Lithium concentrator may coincide with the recovery of the price of battery metal.

The lithium price has fallen nearly 90% in the last two years due to an oversupply largely driven by Chinese production. Miners have been forced to stop projects and reduce jobs. Analysts say that the production cuts in China and strong electric vehicle sales could push lithium demand over supply this year.

Barnard stated that "our forecast is that the lithium price will recover in 2027 at the time we expect to have the concentrator plant in production".

Zimbabwe, Africa's largest lithium producer, announced that it would ban exports of lithium concentrates by 2027 in order to encourage more local processing. The government anticipates that Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, and Sinomine will have finished facilities to further process in the country by then. Reporting by Chris Takudzwa Muronzi. (Editing by Nelson Banya, Mark Potter and Mark Potter.)

(source: Reuters)