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Banking on lithium cure

Companies are looking for lithium in California’s most troubled lake plagued by pollution that creates toxic, carcinogen­ic dust. Locals hope businesses will bring jobs and help clean up the salton sea.

- By LOUIS SAHAGUN

STUDYING the complexity of mud on the ocean floor is a life’s work for Timothy Lyons, so when the tall and lean biogeochem­ist asks you to join an expedition in search of chemical mysteries buried deep beneath the waves, be prepared to get wet and dirty.

On a recent foray onto California’s largest and most troubled lake, Lyons rode a Zodiac skiff with a 15-horsepower engine across the Salton Sea against a backdrop of desolate mountains, dunes and miles of shoreline bristling with the bones of thousands of dead fish and birds.

As he approached the centre of the lake with a clutch of passengers including two members of his laboratory at the University of California, Riverside, Lyons said, “Cut the engine. Let’s grab some mud.”

Moments later, Caroline Hung, 24, and Charles Diamond, 36, dropped a coring device over the side, then hauled up a sample of sediment that was grey on the bottom, dark brown on top, and as gooey as peanut butter.

Hazard ahead

“The big problem at the Salton Sea is intermingl­ed with that organic brown layer on top – and to be honest, it’s scary,” said Lyons, 63. “It’s loaded with pesticides and heavy metals – molybdenum, cadmium and selenium – that linger in greatest concentrat­ions in deeper water.”

“That should worry people, because the Salton Sea is shrinking and exposing more and more of this stuff to scouring winds that carry them far and wide,” he added. “Our goals include mapping where these hazardous materials are located, and determinin­g where they came from and what may become of them if trends continue.”

For Lyons’ research team, filling blanks in existing data is an obsession, and it could have significan­t implicatio­ns at a time when the air practicall­y crackles with a volatile mix of environmen­tal danger and economic opportunit­ies promised by ongoing efforts to tap immense reserves of lithium, a key ingredient of rechargeab­le batteries.

Few dispute the need for swift action at the 343-square-mile (888sq km) lake straddling Imperial and Riverside counties, about 150 miles (240km) southeast of Los Angeles. Clouds of salty, alkaline toxic dust containing heavy metals, agricultur­al chemicals and powdery-fine particulat­es linked to asthma, respirator­y diseases and cancer are rolling off newly exposed playa, threatenin­g the health of thousands of nearby residents.

Delays and costs are mounting for many projects that were designed to be showcases of restoratio­n and dust mitigation. Scientists say it’s because the projects were developed without considerat­ion for heat waves, severe droughts and water cutbacks due to climate change, or for the constantly evolving underlying geology at the hyper-saline landlocked lake at the southern end of the San Andreas Fault, where shifting tectonic plates bring molten material and hot geothermal brine closer to Earth’s surface.

Now, large corporatio­ns investing in proposals to suck lithium out of the brine produced by local geothermal operations have revived hopes of jobs and revenue from land leases, with lithium recovery projects potentiall­y supporting internship­s, education programmes and environmen­tal restoratio­n projects for years to come.

Effect on nearby communitie­s

The big question during a recent meeting sponsored by the Lithium Valley Commission, a group of lawmakers and community leaders organised to help guide decisions that could affect low-income communitie­s surroundin­g the Salton Sea, was this: What’s in it for us?

“The lithium rush at the Salton Sea cannot be stopped,” said Frank Ruiz, Audubon California’s programme director for the lake and a member of the lithium commission. Communitie­s surroundin­g the Salton Sea, he said, “see that as a victory – a ticket to a better life.”

“If done correctly,” he said, “it will elevate the region by creating jobs, benefit the state and the nation by making geothermal energy more affordable, and lay the groundwork for negotiatio­ns aimed at ensuring that some of the royalties from lithium production and related land leases are used to support dust reduction and environmen­tal restoratio­n projects.”

Jonathan Weisgall, a spokesman for Berkshire Hathaway Energy, which was recently awarded a Us$6mil (Rm25mil) California Energy Commission grant for a demonstrat­ion project at a geothermal facility in the nearby community of Calipatria, agreed, but stopped short of guarantees.

“My passion is workforce developmen­t and economic opportunit­ies in the clean energy sector,” Weisgall said. “We don’t want to bring in a workforce from outside Imperial County if we don’t have to.”

In the beginning

The Salton Sea was created in 1905 when the Colorado River broke through a silt-laden canal and roared unimpeded for two years into a basin near Brawley then known as the Salton Sink.

Fishermen flocked to its barnacle-covered shores to catch corvina, croaker and sargo. Birds flocked to its wetlands, turning it into one of the most important stops along the Pacific Flyway for species, including 90% of the migration’s white pelicans.

But the Salton Sea is a non-draining body of water – which is what makes it technicall­y a sea and not a lake – with no ability to cleanse itself. Trapped in its waters are salt and selenium-laden agricultur­al

runoff as well as heavy metals deposited over the last 116 years, authoritie­s say.

Some scientists believed that 2018 was the start of a profound environmen­tal, public health and economic disaster for California.

The change was predicted in 2003 when the state Legislatur­e promised to slow the shrinking of the lake as part of a successful effort to persuade the Imperial Irrigation District to sell some of its water to San Diego. Under the agreement, the district stopped sending fresh water into the lake on Dec 31, 2017.

With relatively little water flowing in, the salinity level continues to rise. It is now at about 68 parts per thousand, authoritie­s say. That’s nearly twice as high as the salinity of the Pacific Ocean, which is about 35 parts per thousand.

Bad for birds and fish

The Salton’s high salinity has made it inhospitab­le to tilapia, a primary food source for migrating birds; the fish has all but stopped reproducin­g. Visiting bird population­s are a small fraction of what they once were.

The only fish in the Salton Sea today are inch-long desert pupfish and hybrid tilapia. Scientists say even these will survive only near the mouths of rivers and canals once the salinity level reaches 70 parts per thousand, which is expected within the next few years.

A study by the US Bureau of Reclamatio­n concluded that doing nothing to keep the Salton Sea viable could end up requiring nearly 10 billion dollars in mitigation projects.

Critics point to the US Fish and Wildlife Service’s Red Hill Bay project on the Salton Sea as an example of what has not been accomplish­ed.

The restoratio­n programme was designed to create more than 500 acres of shallow marine habitat for migratory shorebirds at the sea’s southern end in Imperial County, using water from a nearby river and a 183,000-pound (83,000kg) steel barge equipped with pumps anchored a mile (1.6km) offshore.

Six years of delays have added costs to the project’s original Us$5.3mil (Rm22.1mil) budget. But it may never cross the finish line because of a series of unforeseen problems that have cropped up as the Salton Sea recedes and the flows of its tributarie­s decline. For example, the Alamo River is no longer considered a source of water for the project because its flows have fallen below an inlet that was designed to guide water into the proposed marine habitat.

“The Red Hill Bay project was a solution to a problem that existed 15 years ago,” said Tina Shields, water department manager at the irrigation district. “The design doesn’t work anymore because it is a dynamic place and conditions have changed.”

Environmen­tal justice

The Salton Sea remains an environmen­tal war zone like no other. Lyons’ team aims to collect informatio­n that can help stakeholde­rs make the best decisions moving forward.

His team members’ recent venture into the Salton Sea got off to a wobbly start when they gathered in bulging life vests at one of the few remaining places where a boat can be put into the water: a remote stretch of ankle-deep shallows and ooze.

After several minutes of pushing and pulling their little skiff into deeper water, they climbed aboard and set out on tea-coloured water as smooth as glass. Their goal was 30 feet (9m) below the surface.

“It is an exciting time to be investigat­ing the contents of the mud we’re pulling up out of the water,” Hung said. “In it are pieces of informatio­n that could help bring environmen­tal justice to local communitie­s.” – dpa/tca/los Angeles Times

 ?? — robert Michael/dpa-zentralbil­d/dpa ?? Lithium recovery projects can potentiall­y support internship­s, education programmes and environmen­tal restoratio­n projects for years to come, in the united states.
— robert Michael/dpa-zentralbil­d/dpa Lithium recovery projects can potentiall­y support internship­s, education programmes and environmen­tal restoratio­n projects for years to come, in the united states.

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