In Chilean desert, global thirst for
lithium is fueling a 'water war'
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[August 29, 2018]
By Dave Sherwood
SANTIAGO (Reuters) - On Chilean water
regulator Oscar Cristi's desk, a small white espresso cup teeters atop
piles of documents and loose folders that appear on the point of
collapse, perhaps an apt metaphor for the growing water crisis in parts
of the Andean country.
Sitting in his eighth-floor office adjacent the presidential palace,
Cristi, a PhD economist, lays out a map of Chile showing key watersheds
for mining. Swaths of the mineral-rich north are colored blue, denoting
areas where aquifers are over-exploited.
Soon, if Cristi gets his way, they will be red, meaning new water rights
will be banned.
Reams of water rights were granted by Chilean governments over decades
with little consideration for their cumulative impact as miners
scrambled to stake claims on the small pockets of water available in the
salt flats of the Salar de Atacama.
The Salar sits in the world's driest desert. The water trapped beneath
the salt pan feeds the world's biggest copper mine and holds in
suspension more than one-third of the world's current supply of lithium,
the ultra-light metal used in electric car batteries, mobile phones and
lap-tops.
With demand for water growing in a region economically vital to the
country, Cristi is now taking steps to rein in usage. But there is a
problem. No one really knows how much water is there. Cristi said
Chilean development agency Corfo, which helps oversee lithium extraction
in the Salar, hopes to provide a better picture in a study due in
December.

"The state has been very reluctant to draw up bans on water extraction,"
said Cristi, who was only recently appointed head of the water
authority. "We want to take much more diligent approach in decreeing
prohibited areas."
Cristi did not say why past governments had been hesitant to declare
bans.
In Chile, threats of a government crackdown on over-usage of water often
ring hollow. Mines need water, and the country´s copper-driven economy
needs mines. A sweeping overhaul of Chile's dictatorship-era water code
proposed in 2014 has languished in Congress, slowed by intense lobbying
by industry.
Now though, the mining industry is paying close attention to Cristi.
Earlier this month his agency imposed a rare ban on new permits to
extract water from an aquifer that is a critical water supply for BHP´s
Escondida, the world´s largest copper mine.
The agency is also preparing to create a drinking water reserve nearer
the operations of top lithium producers SQM and Albemarle that would
allow the government to further restrict water use there.
SQM and Albemarle say they have all the water rights they need and do
not expect new restrictions to impact their current or future production
of lithium.
'WATER WAR'
A global boom in demand for lithium has set off a scramble in Chile,
which is home to nearly 50 percent of the world's reserves of the metal.

Local indigenous groups, SQM and Albemarle, regional copper miners and
newcomers to the region are all competing for water.
"What we have is a water war in the salt pan. There's a huge crush on
water and nowhere to get it from," said Alonso Barros, an attorney with
the Atacama Desert Foundation, an NGO that works with indigenous groups
in the region.
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A view of brine pools of a lithium mine on the Atacama Salt Flat in
the Atacama Desert, Chile August 16, 2018. Picture taken August 16,
2018. REUTERS/Ivan Alvarado

SQM and Albemarle both recently signed deals with the government to
sharply increase their quotas for extracting lithium from the Salar,
although they say they will not use any more water than they have
already been granted. Newcomers like Wealth Minerals, New Energy
Metals, and Lithium Chile have also announced projects in the salt
flats.
Wealth Minerals, New Energy Metals and Lithium Chile did not
immediately respond to requests for comment.
DATA DROUGHT
On a computer screen, Cristi scrolls through a spreadsheet showing
row upon row of water rights granted decades ago in the southernmost
sector of the Salar - totaling six times more than the government
now believes available - with little more than each company's own
data to support their sustainability.
Past governments did not adequately map how much water is available,
says Cristi. Now monitoring wells are being installed in some areas,
but base line data is still lacking.
"Our (understanding) continues to be limited now, but back then, it
was very limited," he said.
The cumulative impact of water rights granted over the years to
copper and lithium miners in the world's most arid desert has never
been considered, according to Ingrid Garces, a professor who studies
salt flats at Chile's University of Antofagasta.

"We're managing lithium as though it were a type of hard-rock
mining," said Garces. "But we're mining water, not rock. This is a
watershed."
Take too much water from one place, she says, and it may impact
another, comparing it to sucking water from a glass with a syringe.
"Even if you're drawing from just one area, the whole is still
reduced," she said.
Sorting out the water crisis at Atacama is complicated by a lack of
data, but also a jurisdiction issue.
The brine from which miners extract lithium is water, but in Chile,
it is regulated as a mineral like copper or iron. Environmental
regulators handle permits for brine, while the water authority
permits freshwater pumping.
A lack of communication between the two, combined with a lack of
understanding about how freshwater and brine interact beneath the
Salar, has left authorities hamstrung, says Cristi.
"There may be an imbalance that we're not accounting for," he said.
(Reporting by Dave Sherwood and Fabian Cambero; Editing by Ross
Colvin)
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