Daily Mail

There’s lithium in them thaar Cornish hills!

‘Globally significan­t’ levels could spark new Poldark era

- By Francesca Washtell City Correspond­ent

CoRNWALL could be about to enter a new Poldark era of mining after ‘globally significan­t’ amounts of lithium were found in undergroun­d waters.

Mining firm Cornish Lithium said the county holds some of the world’s best quality reserves of the metal, which is vital for mobile phone and electric car batteries.

Reviving the area’s mining industry could create hundreds of jobs in one of Britain’s most economical­ly deprived regions.

Company founder Jeremy Wrathall says the deposits come from an enormous layer of granite that stretches from the Scilly Isles to Dartmoor and some of them are dissolved in hot saline water that can be pumped to the surface for extraction.

Cornwall had some of the richest copper reserves on earth during the 18th and early 19th centuries and its mining technology was the most sophistica­ted in the world.

In Winston Graham’s Poldark novels, set in that era, hero Ross Poldark’s family had made their fortune in Cornish copper mines. The stories were later adapted into two major BBC TV series starring Robin Ellis in the 1970s and Aidan Turner more recently.

But the county’s last mine – the

South Crofty tin mine near Redruth – closed in 1998. Cornish Lithium’s United Downs Deep Geothermal Power Project is also near Redruth, a few hundred yards away from the ‘Ale and Cakes’ mine were lithium was discovered in the 19th century.

The lithium in local hot springs has been known since then, but there was no market for it at the time.

‘This is a massive opportunit­y for Cornwall and for the UK,’ said Mr Wrathall. His firm, based near Falmouth, has identified four areas where it can build plants, each creating between ten and 50 jobs.

If the company also goes ahead with plans to establish a traditiona­l ‘hard rock’ mine, this could create another 100 or so jobs. There could be ‘many, many other new sites’ and what his firm had pioneered could be repeated all over the county and beyond, said Mr Wrathall.

Lithium is in huge demand as an environmen­tally friendly metal as the world switches to low- carbon energy. Demand for electric car batteries is set to rocket as Britain aims to phase out petrol and diesel car sales by 2035.

Cornish Lithium says the way it extracts the metal is environmen­tally friendly too. Lithium and other sediments are filtered out of geothermal water and clean water goes straight back into the ground.

‘ It’s a double whammy because it is zero carbon and is enabling zero carbon,’ said Mr Wrathall.

Additional­ly. the geothermal water brought up from undergroun­d is incredibly hot and could be put to other uses.

Cornish Lithium has had money from the Government’s ‘Getting Building Fund’ to help create a pilot lithium extraction plant at the United Downs site. Constructi­on will start soon and the plant is expected to be operating in around 18 months.

In the heyday of Cornwall’s copper, tin and silver mines the region’s highly skilled miners were sent to nations including Australia, South Africa and Mexico to help establish nascent industries.

It is claimed that the Cornish pasties they made helped inspire internatio­nal dishes such as Mexico’s ‘pastes’.

‘There could be many, many sites’

 ??  ?? Mine mogul: Aidan Turner as Poldark in the BBC series. Left: A derelict tin mine
Mine mogul: Aidan Turner as Poldark in the BBC series. Left: A derelict tin mine

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