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  • - [Narrator] Underneath the Salton Sea's toxic lake bed

  • is an estimated 18 million metric tons of lithium

  • suspended in hot geothermal brine.

  • (brine splashing)

  • That's enough to power more than 375 million EV batteries.

  • California's largest lake

  • has the world's biggest concentration of lithium

  • in geothermal brine,

  • which could make the US self-sufficient in the mineral.

  • It's a revival for the area,

  • which was a thriving vacation spot until the 1960s.

  • - [Announcer] The miracle sea in the desert,

  • the Salton Sea.

  • - [Narrator] But today, the shrinking lake

  • is an environmental disaster,

  • leaving behind toxic dust

  • in the surrounding desert community, still.

  • - The Salton Sea region

  • presents a once-in-a-generation opportunity.

  • - [Narrator] But seizing that opportunity isn't easy.

  • Getting to all that lithium requires new tech, like this,

  • to stand up against the corrosive conditions.

  • At stake is hundreds of billions of dollars worth of lithium

  • and thousands of white-collar jobs.

  • Here's how companies are racing to develop new ways

  • to extract lithium from this toxic lake,

  • and whether that will provide a lifeline or be a threat

  • to the surrounding Imperial Valley.

  • (dramatic music)

  • - This resource is really high up there in terms

  • of both sustainability and scalability as well.

  • - [Narrator] David Deak leads strategy and development

  • at EnergySource Minerals,

  • one of three companies

  • competing to extract lithium at the Salton Sea.

  • Inside this non-descript shipping container

  • is the pilot version of the tech

  • that could give this area new life.

  • Part of what makes the Salton Sea unique

  • is its huge reserve of geothermal brine,

  • a mix of superheated salty water rich in minerals.

  • That geothermal brine has been mined for green energy

  • since the 1980s,

  • but companies are now eyeing

  • something even more valuable than steam power, lithium.

  • EnergySource is developing a less resource-intensive way

  • to extract it from the brine.

  • Right now, most of the world's lithium

  • is extracted from Australia's open pit mines

  • or South America's evaporation ponds.

  • Both processes are water-intensive

  • and can create a lot of contamination and waste.

  • The new method is called Direct Lithium Extraction or DLE,

  • and it adds just a few steps

  • to the geothermal energy generation

  • already happening at the Salton Sea.

  • Once that geothermal energy is pulled out,

  • the brine is deposited back into the reservoir.

  • - But what we're working on

  • is a process for which we intercept that return process

  • where we will then extract lithium

  • and turn that into product.

  • - [Narrator] Lithium extraction begins here,

  • where brine is passed to this machine

  • full of plastic tubes and columns

  • carrying what's called an absorbent.

  • - This is our secret sauce.

  • The way it works

  • is that it's a very high surface area material.

  • Think of it as sort of like a sponge

  • that's selectively absorbing lithium and nothing else.

  • - [Narrator] In those same columns,

  • the company strips the lithium

  • out of the absorbent with water.

  • - We are comfortably extracting

  • over 90% of the lithium that comes out.

  • - [Narrator] That's double what can be extracted from brine

  • using more traditional methods like evaporation ponds.

  • The final product is this clear solution,

  • purified lithium chloride.

  • - We can further process this into a solid product

  • that we can package and send out to battery makers

  • and EV producers.

  • - [Narrator] The company plans to start building

  • the commercial facility in 2024,

  • with commercial lithium production beginning in 2027.

  • Once it's built, EnergySource source expects to process

  • 20,000 metric tons of lithium every year,

  • enough for half a million EV batteries alone.

  • Ford has already signed on to buy some of that supply.

  • While EnergySource is gearing up to go commercial,

  • there's competition on its heels.

  • Berkshire Hathaway Energy currently operates

  • 10 of the 11 geothermal plants around the Salton Sea.

  • - They own most of the resource

  • and they will dominate,

  • eventually the production of lithium down here.

  • - [Narrator] Meanwhile, a third player,

  • Controlled Thermal Resources is working to catch up.

  • Unlike the other two companies,

  • CTR doesn't currently own or operate a geothermal plant.

  • But in January, it began construction

  • on the first phase of its lithium facilities,

  • which will produce

  • 25,000 tons of lithium product every year,

  • that's more than four times the amount

  • the US currently produces.

  • All this interest has turned the area into.

  • - What we refer to as the Saudi Arabia of lithium.

  • - [Narrator] Right now, the US makes less than 1%

  • of the world's total lithium supply,

  • most of which is mined in Nevada.

  • The Salton Sea's reserves

  • could transform domestic production.

  • They are estimated to contain enough lithium

  • to ultimately produce nearly half of current global output.

  • - It is used in everything from electric vehicle batteries

  • to battery storage to cell phones,

  • and so the opportunity

  • to potentially recover lithium in such a high volume

  • is of particular interest.

  • - [Narrator] It's taken years to get to this point,

  • and it will still be years

  • before any lithium production begins at a commercial scale.

  • - This type of brine that comes from this region,

  • it is highly mineralized.

  • Many elements of the periodic table

  • you will find in this brine and it's very hot,

  • which means that it could be quite a corrosive brine.

  • A lot of this tubing and processing is done with plastics

  • or with special non-corrosive metals.

  • - [Narrator] The drying Salton Sea itself,

  • makes extraction even more difficult.

  • - 10 years ago, the water was up to the edge of the volcano

  • and it's now receded off into the distance.

  • - [Narrator] Since 1999, the Salton Sea

  • has shrunk by more than 30%.

  • The receding shorelines fueled by drought,

  • have decimated the region's ecosystems

  • and exposed more than 30,000 acres of toxic lake bed.

  • - The current sea, which formed in the early 1900s,

  • has been maintained largely due to agricultural runoff,

  • but associated with that runoff are pesticides

  • and fertilizer components.

  • It's this material that gets airborne

  • and generates dust

  • that creates asthma problems

  • in children and the elderly.

  • - [Narrator] That toxic dust is laced with bacteria,

  • heavy metals, and carcinogens like DDT,

  • threatening the community and growing workforce

  • that a multi-billion dollar lithium industry

  • would bring to the region.

  • - In order for the lithium economy

  • to be successful down here,

  • they need to have a healthy workforce.

  • You don't wanna bring in a workforce

  • that's gonna have chronic asthma all the time.

  • - [Narrator] Some Imperial Valley residents are concerned

  • lithium extraction could worsen

  • the region's environmental issues.

  • Right now, it's unclear

  • how operations could affect health problems.

  • That's why some community leaders like Luis Olmedo,

  • say, "The lithium industry should spearhead efforts

  • to tackle the toxic dust."

  • Olmedo is the executive director of Comite Civico del Valle,

  • a nonprofit that advocates for environmental justice.

  • - We're predominantly communities of Color,

  • farm-working communities, low-income communities.

  • Part of our role is to make sure

  • that there are fair and equitable negotiations.

  • - [Narrator] Imperial County has the highest

  • unemployment rate in California,

  • and nearly a quarter of children live in poverty.

  • But jobs in the lithium industry

  • promise a new way of making ends meet.

  • Imperial County estimates the industry could bring

  • as many as 81,000 jobs to the region.

  • While the lithium industry could bring an economic boost,

  • water use remains a concern in a region

  • that receives just three inches of rainfall each year.

  • - The main use of water in the Imperial Valley

  • is for agriculture.

  • If we wanna have a successful lithium industry here,

  • we've gotta make sure

  • some of that water gets used for lithium processing.

  • - [Narrator] In January, Comite Civico del Valle

  • filed a notice of intent to sue the County

  • after it approved the plans

  • for Controlled Thermal Resources' new lithium facilities.

  • Overuse of Colorado River water and industry pollution,

  • were two of the key complaints.

  • In a statement, the County said,

  • that, "Since the beginning of Lithium Valley,

  • it has worked to guarantee that residents and communities

  • directly benefit from the economic

  • and environmental advancements these developments herald."

  • As momentum for lithium extraction builds,

  • community leaders want to see

  • written agreements from companies

  • on their community commitments.

  • - We want them to be able to do business here,

  • but everyone in this community

  • that is doing business here

  • needs to do their own investments

  • and making sure they mitigate their pollution.

  • - [Narrator] In a step towards

  • ensuring the community benefits,

  • Governor Gavin Newsom signed legislation

  • allowing Imperial County

  • to tax every metric ton of lithium produced.

  • The majority of the revenue

  • is slated for Salton Sea restoration

  • and community benefit projects.

  • Amid the promises of a lithium gold rush,

  • the future of the dwindling Salton Sea remains less certain.

  • While there are plans in place

  • to tackle some of the region's toxic dust,

  • they aren't a long-term fix.

  • - We have the greatest economic opportunity in our history,

  • to be able to turn up enough supply of lithium

  • for this entire country and the world,

  • but we can only accomplish success

  • if we have mitigation, if we have community benefits.

  • (dramatic music)

- [Narrator] Underneath the Salton Sea's toxic lake bed

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This Toxic, Drying U.S. Lake Could Turn Into the ‘Saudi Arabia of Lithium' | WSJ

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2024 年 02 月 24 日
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