Latest News

Kodal: Mali lithium exports are blocked because of delays in obtaining permits

Kodal: Mali lithium exports are blocked because of delays in obtaining permits

Kodal Minerals' chief executive Bernard Aylward said that regulatory hurdles in Mali had prevented the British miner from exporting more than 20,000 tons of lithium concentrate.

Kodal's blockade of shipments comes as global lithium production will drop by as much as 228,000 tons this year, as miners reduce operations due to the plummeting price for the metal used in electric vehicles batteries.

Aylward reported that Kodal has agreed to sell the entire production to China's Hainan Mining.

He said, "We spend money on a product we want to sell... Our buyer wants to buy it and we can't even export."

The mining and trade ministry of Mali did not reply to our requests for comment.

The West African nation, which has been a major producer of gold for many years, is now looking to develop its lithium reserves. At the same time its military government is asserting greater control over the mining industry in an effort to increase revenues.

Malian authorities arrested foreign executives, seized gold and confiscated gold stocks while they were negotiating with multinational gold miner companies.

Aylward stated that in Kodal’s case, officials were examining a pricing system to ensure that the spodumene concentrated produced at the Bougouni Project is sold at current market rates.

He said that the company had been in final approval negotiations since last year, and now is finalising its export license in hopes of sending out its first shipment by mid-June.

Other operations in Mali also face delays with export permits. "It's not just the Kodal team," said he. Ganfeng Lithium in China, which operates Mali’s only other lithium-based mine, has not responded to a comment request. Maxwell Akalaare Adombila, Portia Crowe and Robbie Corey Boulet edited the article.

(source: Reuters)