Bolivia: The Saudi Arabia of lithium?
by Simon Romero
In the rush to build the next generation of hybrid or electric cars, a sobering fact confronts both automakers and
governments seeking to lower their reliance on foreign oil: Almost half of the world's lithium, the mineral needed to
power the vehicles, is found in Bolivia -- a country that may not be willing to surrender it easily.
Japanese and European companies are trying to strike deals to tap the resource, but a nationalist sentiment about the
lithium is building in the government of President Evo Morales, who already has nationalized Bolivia's oil and
natural-gas industries.
For now, the government talks of closely controlling the lithium and keeping foreigners at bay. Adding to the
pressure, indigenous groups in the remote salt desert where the mineral lies are pushing for a share in the eventual
bounty.
"We know that Bolivia can become the Saudi Arabia of lithium," said Francisco Quisbert, 64, the leader of Frutcas, a
group of salt gatherers and quinoa farmers on the edge of Salar de Uyuni, the world's largest salt flat. "We are
poor, but we are not stupid peasants. The lithium may be Bolivia's, but it is also our property."
The new constitution Morales got passed in January bolstered such claims. One of its provisions could give Indians
control over natural resources in their territory, strengthening their ability to win concessions from the
authorities and private companies, or even block mining projects.
None of this is dampening efforts by foreigners, including Japanese conglomerates Mitsubishi and Sumitomo and a group
led by a French industrialist, Vincent Bollore. In recent months all three have sent representatives to La Paz, the
capital, to meet with Morales' government about gaining access to the lithium, a critical component for batteries
that power cars and other electronics.
"There are salt lakes in Chile and Argentina, and a promising lithium deposit in Tibet, but the prize is clearly in
Bolivia," Oji Baba, an executive in Mitsubishi's Base Metals Unit, said in La Paz. "If we want to be a force in the
next wave of automobiles and the batteries that power them, then we must be here."
Mitsubishi is not alone in planning to produce cars using lithium-ion batteries. Ailing automakers in the United
States are pinning their hopes on lithium. General Motors next year plans to roll out its Volt, a car using a
lithium-ion battery along with a gas engine. Nissan, Ford and BMW, among other carmakers, have similar projects.
Demand for lithium, long used in small amounts in mood-stabilizing drugs and thermonuclear weapons, has climbed as
makers of batteries for small electronic devices use the mineral. But the automotive industry holds the biggest
untapped potential for lithium, analysts say. Since it weighs less than nickel, which is also used in batteries, it
would allow electric cars to store more energy and be driven longer distances.
With governments, including the Obama administration, seeking to increase fuel efficiency and reduce dependence on
imported oil, private companies are focusing on this desolate corner of the Andes, where Quechua-speaking Indians
subsist on the remains of an ancient inland sea by bartering the salt they carry out on llama caravans.
Dealing with Morales
The US Geological Survey says 5.4 mm tons of lithium could potentially be extracted in Bolivia, compared with 3 mm in
Chile, 1.1 mm in China and just 410,000 in the United States. Independent geologists estimate that Bolivia might have
even more lithium at Uyuni and its other salt deserts, though high altitudes and the quality of the reserves could
make access difficult.
While estimates vary widely, some geologists say electric-car manufacturers could draw on Bolivia's lithium deposits
for decades. But foreigners seeking to tap Bolivia's lithium deposits must navigate the policies of Morales, 49, who
has clashed repeatedly with US, European and even South American investors.
Morales shocked neighbouring Brazil, with whom he is on friendly terms, by nationalizing its natural-gas projects
here in 2006 and seeking a sharp rise in prices. He carried out his latest nationalization before the vote on the
constitution, sending soldiers to occupy the operations of British oil giant BP.
At the La Paz headquarters of Comibol, the state agency that oversees mining projects, Morales' vision of combining
socialism with advocacy for Bolivia's Indians is prominently on display. Copies of Cambio, a new state-controlled
daily newspaper, are available in the lobby, while posters of Che Guevara, the leftist revolutionary killed in
Bolivia in 1967, appear at the entrance to Comibol's offices.
"The previous imperialist model of exploitation of our natural resources will never be repeated in Bolivia," said
Saul Villegas, head of a division in Comibol that oversees lithium extraction. "Maybe there could be the possibility
of foreigners accepted as minority partners, or better yet, as our clients."
Comibol is investing about $ 6 mm in a small plant near the village of Rio Grande on the edge of Salar de Uyuni,
where it hopes to begin Bolivia's first industrial-scale effort to mine lithium from the white, moonlike landscape
and process it into carbonate for batteries.
Technicians first need to get a brine, or water saturated with salt found deep beneath the salt desert, to the
surface, where it is evaporated in pools to expose the lithium. Morales wants the plant finished by the end of this
year. Workers here were in a frenzy to meet that goal late January, labouring under the sun around half-finished
walls of brick.
Over a meal of llama stew and a Pepsi, Marcelo Castro, 48, the manager overseeing the project, explained that along
with processing lithium, the plant had another objective: "Of course, lithium is the mineral that will lead us to the
post-petroleum era. But in order to go down that road, we must raise the revolutionary consciousness of our people,
starting on the floor of this very factory."
Sensing a key moment
Beyond the tiny plant, lithium analysts say Bolivia, one of Latin America's least developed nations, needs to be
investing much more to start producing carbonate. But with economic growth slowing and a decline in oil prices
limiting the reach of its top patron, Venezuela, it remains unclear how Bolivia can achieve this on its own.
Still, even though Morales is asserting greater control of the economy and taking over oil and gas projects,
optimistic industry analysts point out that he allowed some foreign companies to stay in the country as minority
partners.
Mining lithium in Bolivia has its own history of fits and starts. In the early 1990s, nationalist opposition
reportedly led by Gonzalo Sanchez de Lozada, a wealthy holder of mining concessions who later became Bolivia's
president, thwarted a plan by Lithco, a US company, to tap the lithium deposits here.
That history, coupled with Morales' tensions with Washington, might help explain why US companies appear to be on the
sidelines as others seek lithium deals here. Sanchez de Lozada ultimately was forced to resign as president in 2003
after Morales led protests against his efforts to export natural gas with the help of foreign capital.
As Bolivia ponders how to tap its lithium, nations with smaller reserves are stepping up. China has emerged as a top
lithium producer, tapping reserves found in a Tibetan salt flat. But geologists and economists are fiercely debating
whether the lithium reserves outside of Bolivia are enough to meet the climbing global demand. Keith Evans, a
California-based geologist, argues that accessible lithium resources outside Bolivia are significantly larger than
estimates by the US Geological Survey.
Juan Carlos Zuleta, an economist in La Paz, said: "We have the most magnificent lithium reserves on the planet, but
if we don't step into the race now, we will lose this chance. The market will find other solutions for the world's
battery needs."
On the flat salt desert of Uyuni, such debate seems remote to those still labouringas their ancestors did, scraping
salt off the ground into the cone-shaped piles that line the horizon. The lithium found under the surface of this
desert seems even more remote for these 21st-century salt gatherers.
"I've heard of the lithium, but I only hope it creates work for us," said Pedro Camata, 19, his face shielded from
the sun by a ski mask and sunglasses. "Without work out here, one is dead."
