berkeley lab study says india’s lithium reserves more than required

NEW DELHI: A study done by the Berkley Lab states that India has found more than the required lithium over the next 20 years, which would help India in its energy transition. A large portion of lithium would be used in car batteries of electric vehicles that can be recycled and reused in new batteries.
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The study, “Pathways to Atmanirbhar Bharat,” is themed around India’s vision of energy independence by 2047. The U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) released the study. Â Â
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The study shows that adopting clean technology can sharply reduce the transition cost, and lithium edge can enable a pathway for cost-effective energy independence by 2047. Â
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India’s recent lithium discovery is estimated to be 5.9 million tons, substantially larger than the cumulative lithium requirement over the next 20 or so years.Â
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“Our analysis finds that total cumulative lithium requirements between 2022 and 2040 would be roughly 1.9 million tons; 1.7 million tons of that lithium will be used for electric vehicles.” the study states. Â
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“We estimate that if the lithium in retiring EV batteries is recycled (up to 95%), it could meet between a quarter and a half of the annual lithium demand in the 2040s in the CLEAN-India” the study further states.Â
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The rapid economic growth ranked India the third largest energy consumer in the world. Its energy demand will quadruple in the coming decades. India currently imports 90% of its Oil, 80% of its industrial coal and 40% of the natural gas it consumes.Â
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The report emphasizes that India should take the path of energy independence and immune itself to global energy price fluctuation due to geo-political reasons.
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The study determined that achieving energy independence will generate significant economic, environmental, and energy benefits.




