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California lithium company goes public with $4.7 billion SPAC transaction

The companies announced on Monday that the lithium developer, 'Controlled Thermal Resources' (CTR), will be listed in america through a $4.7billion merger with a blank-check company called 'Plum Acquisition Corp.?IV.

After years of low activity on Wall Street, deals by special-purpose acquisition companies (SPACs) are resurging as companies turn to alternative routes to list.

CTR, a lithium and 'geothermal energy developer, said that the deal would allow it to progress 'its flagship Hell's Kitchen Project and begin stage 1 construction.

The stage 1 construction is located in California's Imperial Valley and will include a lithium carbonate production facility with a capacity of up to 25 metric tons per year, a 50 megawatt clean energy facility, as well as additional critical mineral production.

Hell's Kitchen has received more than $285 Million in private investments to date.

CTR CEO Rod Colwell said: "As AI adoption grows and hyperscale data centers expand across the United States the need for reliable, low-carbon power 24/7 is becoming an important infrastructure constraint, and a national security issue."

The?record-high demand for power in the United States is due to energy-intensive data centres, which are a vital part of artificial intelligence.

SPACs are shell companies that raise money via an IPO in order to merge with a private company and make it public.

The deal is expected to close by the end of the second quarter and the combined company will be listed on the Nasdaq with the ticker symbol "CTRH".

Hall Chadwick was Plum IV’s advisor, while Cohen & Company Capital Markets advised CTR. (Reporting by Arasu Kannagi Basil in Bengaluru; Editing by Shinjini Ganguli and Sriraj Kalluvila)

(source: Reuters)