Electric vehicle demand spurs ‘white gold’ rush at California's largest lake

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The Salton Sea, California's largest lake, is best known for increasing salinity and receding shoreline over the course of multiple decades that led to the health crisis and a massive die-off of the area's wildlife.

That is changing as a White House push to rid cars of fossil fuels and a global hunt to source critical minerals for electric vehicle batteries is recasting the region 160 miles southeast of Los Angeles as an El Dorado for the country’s hopes to tackle climate change.

“This is a very defined boundary, very defined field, and so you can put a well down anywhere within the field and you know, strike white gold, if you want to call it that,” Rod Colwell, CEO of Controlled Thermal Resources (CTR), an Australian mining firm developing a geothermal power plant with a lithium mining plant on site, told Yahoo Finance. “The lithium resource would be the largest on the planet, fully developed… so it’s a very, very unique resource.”

CALIPATRIA, CA - NOVEMBER 9, 2021: Drilling has begun at the Australian companys Controlled Thermal Resources geothermal energy and lithium plant on the south side of the Salton Sea on November 9, 20201 in Calipatria, California. The half-billion-dollar Hells Kitchen project has the potential to supply huge amounts of 24/7 clean energy for the power grid  and lithium for electric vehicle batteries and energy storage installations. This will foster a clean energy boom in the Imperial Valley. General Motors has invested in the plant.(Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images)
Drilling has begun at Australian company Controlled Thermal Resources' geothermal energy and lithium plant on the south side of the Salton Sea on November 9, 2021 in Calipatria, California. (Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times via Getty Images) · Gina Ferazzi via Getty Images

Colwell said the region, which California Governor Gavin Newsom has dubbed the “Saudi Arabia of Lithium,” has such an abundance of the resource that it can source enough “white gold” to be used in every electric vehicle manufactured in the U.S. and still have enough saved up to export abroad.

Lithium is critical for accelerating the transition to low-emission vehicles as the average electric car battery requires roughly 8-10kg of the metal. Growing demand has already sent the price of lithium skyrocketing nearly five-fold over the last year from $17,000 a ton to roughly $80,000. And global demand is projected to grow by 40 times in the next 20 years, according to the IEA, with a bulk of that supply coming from China.

The demand has accelerated so quickly that it prompted Tesla (TSLA) CEO Elon Musk to tweet that his company should consider mining the metal itself.

“Imagine those supply constraints, but magnified five, six, seven, eight, nine,10 times,” Eurasia Group U.S. Director Clayton Allen told Yahoo Finance, pointing to President Biden's goal to halve the number of new gas-powered car sales by 2030.

“I think the thing that people ignore is that if Biden gets his way, it wouldn't just be that you would have 50% EV sales by 2030,” Allen added. “The market share of EVs will increase steadily to that point. It's going to put a lot of demand into a market that already has people asking, 'How are we going to fill this?'”