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China strengthens its grip on global lithium trade amid processing plant building boom in Zimbabwe

  • A flurry of building work by Chinese mining companies in Africa has seen several lithium processing plants begin operation
  • The plants saw lithium exports from Zimbabwe double last year, and this year capacity is predicted to triple on last year’s figures

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China is ahead of the pack in the global lithium trade as several mining companies have built processing plants in Zimbabwe. Photo: Getty Images
China is getting a head start in the global rush for lithium after several mining companies completed multimillion-dollar processing plants for the “white gold” in Zimbabwe.

Major Chinese companies, including Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt, Sinomine Resource Group and Chengxin Lithium Group, all completed the construction or upgrade of lithium processing plants in Zimbabwe last year.

The southern African country is home to one of the world’s largest hard rock lithium reserves, attracting Chinese companies in search of raw materials for lithium-ion batteries used to power a host of products from electric vehicles to solar panels.
This means that in the global transition to green energy, Zimbabwe’s lithium reserves are hot property.
Beijing currently controls the global lithium-ion battery industry, while it also dominates much of the processing of the mineral. To get the raw materials it needs, China has ramped up its procurement of lithium from Africa and elsewhere amid disquiet from Washington over Beijing’s grip on critical metal supply chains.
That grip got even tighter last year when African exports of lithium, which mostly go to China, rose sharply between August and November. That was when the companies commissioned processing plants for two products – mainly lithium concentrates spodumene and petalite – for export to China for further processing into lithium chemicals to make batteries and other electronics.
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