Chile鈥檚 SQM (NYSE: SQM)聽has submitted to the country鈥檚 environmental evaluation service聽(SEA) a $778,000 project to cut its use of freshwater and brine聽from the Atacama Desert to mitigate the overall impact of its lithium operations in one of the driest places in the world.
The world鈥檚 second largest lithium producer, which produces the metal by pumping brine from beneath the desert and concentrating it through evaporation in pools, said the project would be executed in stages.
The goal is to limit water extraction to 120 litres per second (l/s) from wells Mullay-1, Allana-1, Socaire-5 and CA-2015 by 2028.聽
In terms of brine 鈥 lithium carbonate-rich saline groundwater聽鈥 SQM aims to reduce extraction 822l/s in the same period.
Chile is currently experiencing the longest drought in decades. The central region alone, where the majority of both the country鈥檚 population and key copper mines are located, has seen rainfall decrease by more than 30% over the last 20 years.
The situation is not only聽is impacting miners, but also farmers and wine makers, which has led authorities to reform the nation鈥檚 water code.聽
The country鈥檚 SMA environmental regulator in 2016 charged聽SQM聽with overdrawing lithium-rich brine from the Salar de Atacama salt flat, prompting the company to develop a $25 million plan to bring its operations back into compliance.
Authorities approved that plan in 2019 but聽reversed their decision in 2020, forcing the miner to start again from scratch on a potentially tougher plan.聽
In the summer of 2021, indigenous communities living around Chile鈥檚 Atacama salt flat聽asked authorities to suspend SQM鈥檚 operating permits聽or make it reduce its operations until submitting an environmental compliance plan, which was filed this week.
The company recently announced it had commissioned a third-party audit of its operations against the world鈥檚 most rigorous standard of best environmental and social practices 鈥 the Initiative for Responsible Mining Assurance (IRMA)鈥檚聽Standard for Responsible Mining.
White ambitions
SQM and the world鈥檚 no. 1 lithium miner Albemarle (NYSE: ALB) are the only two companies producing the battery metal in Chile at-present.
The copper-rich country currently generates聽about 29% of the world鈥檚 supply, but it plans to double production by 2025 to about 250,000 tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE).聽聽
Global demand for the metal, according to Chile鈥檚 projections, will quadruple by 2030, reaching 1.8 million tonnes of lithium.聽Available supply by then is expected to sit at 1.5 million tonnes.聽
Chile鈥檚 Atacama region supplies nearly one-quarter of the globe鈥檚 lithium.
Lawmakers, academics, environmentalists, local communities, German carmaker Volkswagen and Chilean courts have all emphasized the importance of an environmental study to help dispel lingering questions on the impact of lithium mining in Chile.聽