The Oakland Press

Lithium proposal may hurt EV sector, EU warned

- By Mark Burton

Lithium and battery producers warned the European Union that a proposal to classify the metal as a reproducti­ve toxin could severely hurt Europe’s burgeoning electricve­hicle industry.

The material is a key part of EV batteries and is widely used in pharmaceut­icals, industrial lubricants and specialty glasses. A proposal being considered by the European Commission this month would put some lithium chemicals in the highest category of reproducti­ve and developmen­tal toxins, based partly on human studies carried out in the 1980s and 1990s.

That may stigmatize use of the materials and cut investment in the EV sector, lobby groups including Eurobat, the Internatio­nal Lithium Associatio­n and Eurometaux said in an open letter to politician­s. EVs play a crucial role in green efforts, and automakers such as Elon Musk’s Tesla have warned that soaring materials prices and supply-chain bottleneck­s threaten their rollout.

In the letter, the lobby groups raised concerns about the scientific rationale for the classifica­tion, which could lead to the chemicals being establishe­d as a “substance of very high concern” alongside severely carcinogen­ic and mutagenic toxins that the E.U. wants to gradually phase out by restrictin­g usage.

That could undermine separate efforts to boost domestic production of lithium, which the commission designated as a critical raw material in 2020. The proposals refer to lithium carbonate, hydroxide and chloride.

“If the three lithium salts go down this path it could have significan­t unintended consequenc­es in the E.U., putting in question the long-term viability of lithium being produced, refined, used and recycled” in the E.U., Internatio­nal Lithium Associatio­n Secretary General Roland Chavasse said by email.

Categorizi­ng the chemicals as reproducti­ve and developmen­tal toxins could impose higher costs on buyers and crimp producers’ margins, hindering the rationale for further investment in the industry, according to Francesco Gattiglio, director of external affairs for the E.U. at Albemarle. The company is the world’s top lithium miner and operates a lithium chemicals plant in Langelshei­m, Germany.

“While the impact to our specialty customers is unclear at this point, we do not anticipate closure of our Langelshei­m plant,” Gattiglio said by email. “For sure, the classifica­tion would have a negative impact on the possibilit­y to establish lithium conversion plants in Europe.”

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