Bolivia Inaugurates Pilot Plant For Making Lithium-Ion Batteries

Bolivian President Evo Morales inaugurated a Chinese-made pilot plant for manufacturing lithium-ion batteries.

The US$3.7 million facility was built by LinYi Dake in La Palca, a town near the Uyuni Salt Flat, which holds the world’s largest reserves of lithium.

“If we in Bolivia have the greatest reserve of lithium, why not have the greatest lithium industry? This must be our goal and it is in our hands,” Morales said during the ceremony.

The Uyuni Salt Flat, a dried-up sea bed that covers more than 10,000 square kilometres, contains 100 million tonnes of lithium reserves, according to the Bolivian government, though the US Geological Survey puts the figure at just 9 million tonnes.

Uyuni, located in the southwestern province of Potosi, is already home to a pilot plant to make lithium carbonate – the raw material for batteries.

“The immediate objective” of the facility opened Monday is “the training of Bolivian technicians and the understanding of the technology provided by the company LinYi Dake,” Corporacion Minera de Bolivia official Luis Alberto Echazu said.

Two Chinese experts will work with the 21 Bolivian operators for the first four months.

Once it is up and running, the plant will be capable of turning out 1,000 cellphone batteries per day, as well as 40 batteries for use in electric vehicles, Echazu said.