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Thacker Pass lithium project, US – update

Aerial view of the Thacker Pass project

10th September 2021

By: Sheila Barradas

Creamer Media Research Coordinator & Senior Deputy Editor

     

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Name of the Project
Thacker Pass lithium project.

Location
Humboldt County, Nevada, in the US.

Project Owner/s
Lithium Americas.

Project Description
The project has a proven and probable reserve estimate of 179.4-million tonnes of ore, with an average grade of 3 283 parts per million lithium containing 3.1-million tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent.

The prefeasibility study (PFS) envisages a large-scale lithium project with a design capacity of 60 000 t/y of battery-grade lithium carbonate. Production for Phase 1 is estimated at 30 000 t/y, increasing to 60 000 t/y in Phase 2. The project has a mine life of more than 40 years.

The project will be developed as an openpit mining operation using conventional continuous mining equipment.

Given the soft nature of the deposit, minimal blasting and crushing are expected.

The ore will be processed in a leaching circuit using sulphuric acid to liberate the lithium from the claystone.

Following the leaching process, the lithium-bearing solution will be purified using crystallisers and reagents to produce battery-grade lithium carbonate.

The mine plan contemplates mining 509.8-million tonnes of material comprising 330.4-million tonnes of waste rock and 179.4-million tonnes of ore (delivered to plant) over a 46-year mine life.

With the reliance on sulphuric acid, the project will involve the construction of a 5 280 t/d (Phase 1 – 2 640 t/d ) conventional sulphuric acid plant site. The plant will convert molten sulphur into low-cost sulphuric acid, reducing transportation costs and providing a low-cost source of power.

Excess acid will be sold locally to large users in the region. In addition, the sulphuric acid plant proposes a cogeneration facility, providing enough carbon-free electricity to power the entire project, with excess power being sold to the grid.

Additional infrastructure in Phase 2 includes doubling the sulphuric acid capacity by building a second acid plant; increasing capacity in ore preparation, leaching, filtration, crystallisation and reagent storage; and constructing a rail line, with service directly to the plant.

The production process is designed to use conventional and commonly available equipment, arranged to take advantage of the distinctive qualities of the high-grade ore. The process comprises a series of steps to concentrate, separate and produce battery-grade lithium carbonate.

Potential Job Creation
Thacker Pass is expected to provide employment for about 1 000 workers, and for about 300 permanent workers once in operation, with training and skills development programmes aimed at maximising local employment in northern Nevada.

Net Present Value/Internal Rate of Return
The project has a pretax net present value, at an 8% discount rate, of $3.9-billion and an internal rate of return of 36.6%.

Capital Expenditure
Initial capital costs, including a 19% contingency, are estimated at $581-million for Phase 1 and at $478-million for Phase 2.

Planned Start/End Date
The PFS envisages initial Phase 1 production capacity of 30 000 t/y of battery-grade lithium carbonate starting in 2022. Phase 2 construction is projected to start in 2025, with added production entering the market by 2026.

Latest Developments
A US federal judge ruled on September 3 that Lithium Americas Corp may conduct excavation work at its Thacker Pass lithium mine site, denying a request from Native Americans who have said that the digging will desecrate an area they believe holds ancestral bones and artifacts.

The ruling from Chief Judge Miranda Du was the second victory in recent weeks for the project, which could become the biggest US source of lithium, used in electric vehicle batteries.

The court is still considering the broader question of whether former President Donald Trump's administration erred when it approved the project in January. That ruling is expected by early 2022.

Du said the Native Americans did not prove the US government failed to properly consult them during the permitting process. Du denied a similar request from environmentalists in July.

Du said, though, that she was not dismissing all the Native Americans' arguments, but felt bound by existing laws to deny their request.

Vancouver-based Lithium Americas has said that it will protect and preserve tribal artifacts.

No digging can take place until the US Bureau of Land Management issues an Archeological Resources Protection Act permit.

The Burns Paiute Tribe, one of the tribes that brought the lawsuit, noted that the bureau had informed the court last month that the land held cultural value for Native Americans.

"If that's the case, well then there's going to be harm if you start digging into the landscape," Burns Paiute attorney Richard Eichstaedt has said.

Key Contracts, Suppliers and Consultants
None stated.

Contact Details for Project Information
Lithium Americas, email info@lithiumamericas.com.

Edited by Creamer Media Reporter

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