Business Standard

COULD CHILE BE THE NEW SAUDI ARABIA OF E-AGE?

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Lithium is one of the most important raw materials used in top-notch battery technology. It will become even more important once the e-mobility revolution gets into full swing. Chile has reserves of around 7.5 million tonnes slumbering under its surface. This could make the South American country one of the most important players of the nascent e-age, something like the new Saudi Arabia. While smartphone batteries use some 3 gm of lithium, standard ecar batteries can use 10 kg of lithium. Some models by Tesla have 40 kg in their battery packs. Here is a look:

CHILE HAS THE BIGGEST LITHIUM RESERVES

Lithium reserves of the countries and respective mine production in 2016 As North Korea races to build a weapon that for the first time could threaten American cities, its neighbours are debating whether they need their own nuclear arsenals.

The North’s rapidly advancing capabiliti­es have scrambled military calculatio­ns across the region, and doubts are growing the United States will be able to keep the atomic genie in the bottle.

For the first time in recent memory, there is a daily argument raging in both South Korea and Japan — sometimes in public, more often in private — about the nuclear option, driven by worry that the United States might hesitate to defend the countries if doing so might provoke a missile launched from the North at Los Angeles or Washington.

In South Korea, polls show 60 per cent of the population favours building nuclear weapons. And nearly 70 per cent want the United States to reintroduc­e tactical nuclear weapons for battlefiel­d use.

There is very little public support for nuclear arms in Japan, the only nation ever to suffer a nuclear attack, but many experts believe that could reverse quickly if North and South Korea both had arsenals.

Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has campaigned for a military build-up against the threat from the North, and Japan sits on a stockpile of nuclear material that could power an arsenal of 6,000 weapons.

This brutal calculus over how to respond to North Korea is taking place in a region where several nations have the material, the technology, the expertise and the money to produce nuclear weapons.

Beyond South Korea and Japan, there is already talk in Australia, Myanmar, Taiwan and Vietnam about whether it makes sense to remain nuclear—free if others arm themselves — heightenin­g fears that North Korea could set off a chain reaction in which one nation after another feels threatened and builds the bomb.

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