U.S. steps away from flagship lithium project with Berkshire
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[October 05, 2022] By
Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - In a February meeting with
mining executives, President Joe Biden laid out an aggressive goal for
the United States to produce more of its own minerals for the electric
vehicle revolution in ways that respected the environment.
A "big part" of those efforts, the president said, was Berkshire
Hathaway Inc's plan to filter lithium from superhot geothermal brines
swirling beneath California's Salton Sea, something that had never been
done before.
The project aimed to help usher in a new way of producing lithium – a
key constituent of EV batteries – in the United States while avoiding
the controversies that come with building mines that are often unpopular
with local communities.
The U.S. Department of Energy had chosen Berkshire the day Biden was
inaugurated in January 2021 for a $14.9 million grant to study how
Salton Sea-region lithium could be used to make lithium hydroxide, a
specialized type of the metal that produces more efficient and
longer-lasting EV batteries.
"We're going to set America up to lead the world by building a clean
energy economy and a clean energy future," Biden said at the February
event, which was billed as a critical minerals roundtable.
Alicia Knapp, chief executive of Berkshire's BHE Renewables division,
told Biden that Berkshire was "working to secure the most abundant
source of lithium in the United States using the world's most
environmentally friendly technology."
Two weeks later, though, the Energy Department rescinded the grant,
according to emails and documents obtained by Reuters, after Berkshire
requested what the Energy Department called a "material change" to its
lithium project. The withdrawal of the grant has not been previously
reported.
While the sum of money was relatively small for the mining world and the
Salton Sea grant was for a pilot project, the tale of Berkshire's tangle
with Washington shows how Biden's plan to shift the economy away from
fossil fuels faces some significant technical and business challenges.
Thirteen months of negotiations between the company and the government,
which Reuters is reporting for the first time, stalled as Berkshire
sought control over patents, changes to technology, and whether it could
one day sell the lithium business, even after the government helped
build it, the emails and documents show.
Asked about the grant withdrawal, a Biden administration official said
there are "inherent risks" in funding research and development projects,
and noted that several companies including Berkshire are still working
on U.S. lithium projects.
The Energy Department's March 9, 2022, letter telling Berkshire it was
rescinding the grant said the move was "the result of a mutual decision"
and would not bar Berkshire from applying for future federal funding.
Berkshire, however, is facing problems extracting lithium from Salton
Sea geothermal brines, according to three sources with direct knowledge
of the operation who declined to be identified so as not to jeopardize
future relationships with the company.
In a statement to Reuters, Berkshire said it had planned to develop "a
first-of-its-kind demonstration plant to produce lithium hydroxide" but
"subsequently decided to use a commercially proven process" to produce
lithium carbonate instead.
"This change in technology increases the likelihood of success and
accelerates the speed to market," Berkshire spokesperson Dan Winters
said. The company declined to comment for other parts of this story.
'NASTY, HOT SOUP'
Berkshire operates multiple power plants near the Salton Sea, roughly
160 miles (258 km) southeast of Los Angeles, where it flashes steam off
brines brought from deep underground at temperatures around 700°F
(371°C) to spin turbines that produce electricity.
In theory, Berkshire's plan made sense. Technology for an extra
processing step could be connected to one of the existing plants to
extract lithium before the brine is reinjected underground. That would
avoid the need for open-pit mines or large evaporation ponds, the two
most-common but environmentally challenging ways to extract lithium.
From the start, Berkshire's challenge was twofold. First, it needed to
separate lithium from that hot brine using a commercially unproven class
of technology known as Direct Lithium Extraction, or DLE. Then it aimed
to develop new technology to process that lithium into lithium
hydroxide.
[to top of second column] |
An art installation is seen in the
Salton Sea, California's largest inland lake, where the state's
worst drought since 1977 has exacerbated an area already in decline,
in Bombay Beach, California, U.S., July 4, 2021. REUTERS/Aude
Guerrucci/File Photo
For the first challenge, the California Energy Commission gave
Berkshire a $6 million grant in May 2020. As part of its agreement
with the state, Berkshire said it would use DLE technology from
another company, AquaMin Lithium and Water Recovery Inc.
But corroded equipment and clogged pipes from the superhot brine are
plaguing the extraction operation, according to the three sources
with direct knowledge. "I think Berkshire has an unsolvable
problem," said one source, who described the facility struggling to
get even the most basic processing equipment to work due to the
extreme heat of the geothermal brines.
AquaMin, a division of privately held Conductive Energy Inc, did not
respond to requests for comment. The California Energy Commission
(CEC) said its funding for Berkshire was not affected by the loss of
the Energy Department grant.
The region's brine teems with lithium, calcium, sodium and other
minerals that are very complex to separate, said Corby Anderson, who
teaches metallurgy at the Colorado School of Mines.
"It's just a nasty, hot soup that's sometimes acidic," said
Anderson, who is not involved in Berkshire's project.
The U.S. Department of Energy grant was focused on the second
challenge, turning the extracted lithium into lithium hydroxide.
BMW and some other automakers prefer hydroxide over carbonate
because it allows batteries to hold more power.
"Batteries should last longer and therefore be more sustainable"
with hydroxide, Eric Smith, Berkshire's vice president of lithium
development, said during a July 2021 presentation to Salton
Sea-region officials.
But making hydroxide requires extra processing involving
crystallizers and other specialized equipment. If and when Berkshire
is able to extract the lithium from the Salton Sea brine, making
carbonate would be less complicated and expensive than making
hydroxide.
The day after Biden touted Berkshire's project, the company
privately asked the Energy Department to change the grant's scope
and let it make carbonate instead of hydroxide, according to the
emails obtained by Reuters through a public records request.
The Energy Department declined, saying that would be a "substantial
departure" from the original proposal and would be unfair to others
who applied for the grant.
Within weeks the grant was rescinded.
Emails show the Energy Department had warned Berkshire in December
2021 - two months before Biden's minerals roundtable - that talks on
grant terms had reached an "impasse."
While the White House was aware negotiations were ongoing when it
hosted Berkshire, it did not know about the impasse warning,
according to the administration official.
"We remain optimistic and hopeful that (Berkshire's) technology pans
out and think there's great opportunity if and when it does," the
official said.
Berkshire's website now says it aims to open a lithium carbonate
pilot plant next spring.
Berkshire's decision not to make hydroxide from the Salton Sea - and
to forego the federal funding for that - indicates it likely faced
far more complex technical challenges than it expected, four
analysts told Reuters.
"It's an indication to me that they have some real challenges
standing in their path to commercial lithium production," said Chris
Berry, an independent lithium industry consultant who is not
involved in Berkshire's project
Privately held Controlled Thermal Resources Ltd and EnergySource
Minerals LLC are also trying to extract lithium from Salton Sea
brines with different DLE technology for eventual use in EV
batteries, but neither are at commercial production.
"The magic here is elusive," said Anderson, the Colorado professor.
"It's not as easy as people portray it to be."
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder in Houston; additional reporting by
Trevor Hunnicutt in Washington; editing by Peter Henderson and
Claudia Parsons)
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