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Putin claims that Russia may be able to mine its own lithium

Putin claims that Russia may be able to mine its own lithium

On Friday, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated that Russia had the capability to mine its own lithium.

"We have yet to mine lithium." How can we progress without it? We can. We could have done this 10 or 15 year ago," Putin said at a conference in Moscow on advanced technologies.

Polar Lithium is a joint venture of Russian metals giant Nornickel with state-owned nuclear power firm Rosatom. In June, the company announced that it would accelerate its one lithium production project by three to four years. The project was originally scheduled to be completed by 2030.

Polar Lithium is developing the Kolmozerskoye Lithium deposit, which is the largest lithium deposit in Russia and located in the northwest part of the nation. Russia wants to reduce its dependency on lithium imports.

Since 2022, after sanctions against Moscow were imposed over Ukraine, supplies of lithium carbonate from Chile and Argentina has dried up. Russia now relies on Bolivia and China for its supply.

Polar Lithium's goal is to build a full-scale production facility for lithium-ion battery materials in Russia. (Reporting and writing by Dmitry Antonov; Felix Light Editing, Andrew Osborn).

(source: Reuters)