New round of drilling starts at lithium mine
AN extensive drilling programme has started in Cornwall to find out how much of the valuable battery metal lithium is under the surface.
St Austell-based British Lithium Limited (BLL) has embarked on its fourth and largest round of drilling to define the extent of the lithium carbonate resource already identified in previous exploration work last year.
Seventeen large-diameter reversecirculation holes will be drilled to depths of 250metres, with each metre logged and assayed to determine lithium grade and other qualities.
Testing will take place in BLL’s nearby laboratory in the town of Roche. Indicative results are expected by the end of May 2021.
BLL was the first company in the UK to embark on a drilling programme for lithium in 2019 and is the first in the world to be progressing commercial extraction of lithium carbonate from the mica in granite using innovative new technology. Having been awarded a Innovate UK Smart Grant of £500,000 in 2020, BLL currently employs 12 highly-skilled geoscientists, chemical engineers and metallurgists at its base in Roche.
“The bulk sample analysis we carried out at the end of last year was very exciting in terms of the high lithium grades and there is plenty of optimism about what this round of confirmatory drilling will tell us,” said chief executive Andrew Smith.
“Holes will be more tightly spaced than in previous campaigns – providing us with detailed information and invaluable data which will inform a mine plan being prepared by mining engineers, Barra Resources.”
BLL’s latest activity follows hot on the heels of Jaguar Land Rover announcing all Jaguar cars will be electric by 2025. and all Land Rovers
by 2030. BLL chair Roderick Smith said: “The UK Government’s recently published 10-point plan for a green industrial revolution requires all new cars to be electric in just nine years.
“We have been developing our novelLi-SepÒ technology for sustainable lithium extraction in Cornwall for the last four years and have already recruited some of the country’s finest minds to our project.
“We were the first to extract pure lithium from Cornish granite in 2017 and have now perfected our green technology.
“When we are fully operational, we expect to be employing hundreds of people directly and thousands more through our supply chain. We also anticipate meeting at least one third of the UK’s annual demand for lithium, whilst protecting the environment.
“Our progress to date has been excellent and we’re looking forward to seeing what this fourth round of drilling yields.”
In early 2021 a 13-tonne bulk sample of hard rock analysed by BLL’s team at its Cornwall-based metallurgical laboratory showed better than expected results.
The company, aims for full-scale production in three to five years’ time providing the samples continue to show high grade metal.
A SEVEN-YEAR-OLD girl remains in a critical condition following a tragic fire in Exeter which claimed the lives of three people.
The family of the victims confirmed on Monday that Kaylie Rudge, 28, Daniel Rudge, 29, and their young daughter Lillie-Rose, four, died in the blaze at their home on Clayton Road in the St David’s area of the city. Tributes have been pouring in for the “lovely family” ever since.
Police have now confirmed that their investigation into the incident has concluded and officers are treating last Sunday’s tragedy as non-suspicious.
They have also issued an update on the condition of the other children in the house at the time of the fire.
Officers say two of the three children, a nine-year-old boy and a four year-old boy – who was Lillie-Rose’s twin brother – are still being treated at Bristol Royal Hospital for Children, while a third child, aged seven, remains in a critical condition.
Two fundraising appeals, one set up by the WMN sister website DevonLive, are raising money for the family.