Electric Vehicles' Battery Problem - YouTube

Channel: Wendover Productions

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This is lithium.
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Pretty soon, we’re going to need a lot of it.
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Lithium is a useful metal.
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It spends its entire existence trying to get rid of its one outer electron but, crucially,
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this reaction can be both controlled and reversed.
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That means, properly configured, the metal can discharge energy when needed, take in
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more energy, and then discharge that energy.
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Essentially, it can act as a battery.
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It’s only been a few decades since lithium-ion batteries reached commercial feasibility but,
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in that time, they have become the power source of choice for portable electronics thanks
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to their perfect blend of safety and lightness.
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However, the latest major tech boom, the latest infatuation of Silicon Valley and Wall Street
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alike, is centered around the largest consumer electronics product to date: electric vehicles.
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And pretty soon, we’re going to need a lot of them.
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The UK, for example, has committed to banning internal combustion car sales by 2030.
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To replace its 31.5 million vehicles, about 236,000 metric tons of lithium carbonate are
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needed.
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To produce 236,000 metric tons of lithium carbonate, every lithium mine in the world
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would have to devote its output to this one use for nine months, and there are a whole
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lot more countries, a whole lot more lithium applications, and a whole lot more growth
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in the forecast.
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While the industry and its issues may be complex, the way in which battery-grade lithium is
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produced is not.
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Four countries dominate the industry—Argentina, Chile, Australia, and China combined account
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for 92% of the globe’s production.
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The metal is extracted from the ground at massive sites like the Greenbushes mine in
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Western Australia, which is the world’s largest hard-rock lithium mine.
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The site was selected due to the abundance of spodumene in the area, which is a mineral
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that contains large concentrations of lithium.
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Once the raw material is extracted from the ground, it’s transported two and a half
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hours north to the Kwinana Lithium Plant near Perth—a facility majority owned and operated
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by a Chinese company, Tianqi Lithium, which is responsible for almost half of the world’s
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production of the metal.
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Once refined, lithium hydroxide and other compounds are sold to battery manufacturers,
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which in about three quarters of cases means one of three companies—LG Chem, CATL, or
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Panasonic.
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The problem, however, is the world’s solution.
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In addition to the UK, Iceland, Belgium, the Netherlands, Germany, Denmark, Norway, Sweden,
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Israel, Singapore, and South Korea have each committed to banning the sale of internal
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combustion passenger vehicles within the next decade.
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Adding up their annual passenger vehicle sales numbers from 2019, that means the absolute
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base-case demand for EVs a decade from now will be 9.5 million per year.
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Just to reach that, EV production would have to quintuple, but even the most conservative
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forecasters don’t dare tread anywhere close to a number as low as 9.5 million in 2032.
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The market is waking up to what this means for lithium demand.
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Across 2021, Seaborne lithium prices rose from around $8,000 per metric ton to over
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$30,000—a 400% rise in a mere twelve months—and lithium is hardly the only crucial metal for
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lithium-ion battery production—it’s just the one in the name.
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Cobalt and nickel are also critical to most commercially-available versions of these batteries,
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and the situation is hardly different with them.
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Cobalt prices doubled across 2021, while nickel rose to its highest price in a decade.
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So, the world needs a lot more metals, but right now, it’s hard to believe the world’s
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going to get them.
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The biggest hurdle the industry faces is best exemplified here: Thacker Pass, Nevada.
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Thacker Pass is located in one of the most sparsely populated areas of the country.
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It’s an half hour’s drive to the nearest store, an hour to the nearest supermarket,
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and three to the nearest Starbucks.
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The few roads that exist in the area are lucky to see a few cars an hour, travelling to and
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from the various remote farms, ranches, and communities dotting northern Nevada.
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That could soon change, though.
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250 miles or 400 kilometers to the south is the Silver Peak Lithium Mine.
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This is the nation’s only currently operating major lithium mine, despite the fact that
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the US is one of the largest EV markets and home to the world’s largest EV manufacturer.
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China, also a major EV market home to major EV manufacturers, has made significant headway
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in building up its domestic lithium production capacity and the country’s companies also
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have significant presences at the world’s other major lithium production sites.
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This has come to concern those in charge in the US.
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Therefore, sights are set on Thacker Pass—home to the US’ largest lithium deposit.
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This site could singlehandedly propel the US into the ranks of major lithium producers,
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but getting a mine up and running there has proved
 difficult.
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The way in which major lithium deposits are distributed across the world is rather cruel.
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Overwhelmingly, they’re located in arid regions with little water availability, like
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Nevada.
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Thacker Pass receives less than 10 inches or 25 centimeters of rain a year.
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However, the extraction and processing of lithium requires enormous quantities of water.
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It’s expected that operations at the proposed Thacker Pass lithium mine would require 3,224
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gallons or 12,204 liters of water per minute—roughly equivalent to the contents of a backyard,
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above-ground pool.
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That water would be used to pump into the ground as part of the extraction process,
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during refinement, and to conduct necessary dust control at the site.
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To get this water the mine would have to pump it out of the ground using wells, but every
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acre-foot of water in the area is strictly allocated, given the degree of scarcity.
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So the mine has to buy up water rights from others in order to gain the legal right to
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use it.
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What that means, however, is that there’s a direct trade off between one use and another,
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and in this case, the other use is predominantly ranching and farming—two key tenants to
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the local economy.
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In addition, there’s a chance the project could do far more to further the inaccessibility
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of water in northern Nevada.
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The US Bureau of Land Management’s Environmental Impact Study for the project found that it
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presented the distinct possibility of leaking unacceptable levels of arsenic into the area’s
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groundwater table which could take the entire region’s water supply offline for hundreds
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of years.
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In an area where the availability of water undergirds almost all economic activity, that
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has people seriously concerned.
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The issues only compound on top of that.
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As Thacker Pass is, of course, a mountain pass, it acts as a wildlife corridor between
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the Double-H and Montana mountains—two biodiversity hotspots.
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Therefore, the environmental impact study found the project likely to destroy or deteriorate
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thousands of acres of habitat used by the pronghorn antelope, sage grouse, golden eagle,
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and other unique species.
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For interrelated reasons, the project also has a number of local indigenous tribes concerned—the
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most vocal of which is the Fort McDermitt Paiute and Shoshone Tribe.
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They say that during the era of American soldiers rounding up and shipping indigenous people
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off to reservations, two of the tribe’s families hid out in the shelter Thacker Pass
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provided—so they directly attribute the continued existence of their tribe to the
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area.
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In addition, they consider the pass a sacred site, in part because of a historic massacre
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they say occurred there.
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This assertion, however, was directly challenged in a court case related to the mine project,
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and the judge rejected the claim citing a lack of evidence.
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To add to their opposition, the tribe put forward evidence linking the development of
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similar resource-extraction projects, which are predominately staffed by men, to increases
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in the rape and murder of indigenous women in nearby areas.
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Even just looking at these few headline issues, it becomes clear that the Thacker Pass lithium
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mine project is mired in a nearly insurmountable web of controversy and conflict, and it’s
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hardly alone in that status.
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Much of the evidence opponents to the Thacker Pass mine have put forward is based on real-world
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experiences in the lithium triangle—the nexus between Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia
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that hosts some of the world’s most productive lithium production facilities.
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An area in a similar situation—a remote, arid landscape punctuated by small communities
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home to a historically oppressed indigenous population—the lithium triangle has seen
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an economic boon, but it’s come at the cost of environmental and cultural devastation.
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Just as the issues are not confined to one geography, they’re not even confined to
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lithium alone.
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Some 70% of the world’s cobalt, a crucial component to current battery tech, comes from
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the Democratic Republic of the Congo—the 8th poorest country in the world, according
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to World Bank figures.
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While a majority of the cobalt mining is conducted by large mining companies with often shaky
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safety and human rights records, a concerningly large minority is accomplished through what’s
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referred to as “artisanal” mining—a term defining the illegal, informal practice
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of individuals mining cobalt by themselves and selling it on to shady middlemen.
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The complete lack of safety standards or regulations in the sector means child labor and deadly
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mine collapses are rampant.
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For those that aren’t directly injured or killed on the job, long-term exposure to cobalt
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mines has been linked to significant health effects later in life, and fatal birth defects
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for children in the region.
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Altogether, there’s almost no such thing as ethical cobalt.
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There’s also almost no such thing as green lithium.
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There’s little appetite anywhere to increasing lithium mining in the places where it’s
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accessible, and little progress has been made in the DRC in making cobalt mining less socially
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disastrous.
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As demand for EVs and their batteries increases, getting more cobalt and lithium will be incredibly
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difficult.
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However, on top of that, getting more cobalt and lithium that’s more ethical and green,
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or even as ethical and green, will be next to impossible.
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But to decarbonize driving, solutions must be found.
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One option, rather than finding more raw materials, is to need less of them.
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Of course, the way to do that is by making batteries better.
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The most promising short-term innovation that could fulfill that mission is solid state
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batteries.
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Whereas traditional EV batteries have a liquidy, viscous lithium-based electrolyte, solid state
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batteries rather use a solid, metal composition as their ion transport mechanism.
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This switch has a number of benefits including a higher safety profile that reduces the risk
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of fire, and therefore reduces the need for expensive safety features.
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Solid state batteries can also be made without cobalt or nickel, which eliminates two problematic
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and costly necessities in current battery tech.
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Most significant, however, is solid state batteries’ higher energy density.
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Traditional lithium ion compositions used in EV battery packs store about 114 watt-hours
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of energy per pound, or 250 per kilogram.
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That means one pound of battery could move a Tesla Model 3, for example, 0.4 miles, or
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1 kilogram 1.3 kilometers.
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Meanwhile, it’s expected that solid state batteries will be able to store between 175
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and 225 watt-hours per pound or 400 to 500 per kilogram—essentially doubling battery
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density.
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That means Tesla could halve the weight of their half-ton battery pack and not only keep
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range the same, but increase it as the car would no longer need to carry the rest of
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the weight of the battery pack.
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On top of all those benefits, expert believe that, at scale, production costs of solid
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state batteries could be even less than the cheapest current lithium-ion batteries.
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However, the issue is getting to that scale.
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Battery production needs to occur at absolutely massive quantities to reach cost competitiveness—an
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assertion backed up by the industry’s current effective triopoly.
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The process of working down this cost curve is long as there are few applications where
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battery weight matters as much as with EVs, and EVs won’t switch to solid state batteries
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until their cost is competitive, but their cost will only become competitive when the
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industry reaches a production capacity that only EVs can provide.
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So, the industry has to wait for some level of scale to occur through niche solid state
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battery applications in medical devices, race cars, and fighter jets; then wait for consumer
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electronics to realize the weight savings or battery life benefits the innovation could
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provide; then wait for the highest-end EVs to incorporate the technology in order to
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offer super-long ranges as a luxury; before solid-state batteries can finally reach a
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cost that would allow them to permeate into what will by then be the large segment of
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everyday EVs.
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Most estimates place that enticing end-goal more than a decade away.
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Even if the solid-state battery transition reaches fruition earlier, the world will still
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need a whole lot more lithium.
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Far from the potential environmental disaster at Thacker Pass is an existing environmental
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disaster—the Salton Sea.
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A century ago, Colorado River floodwaters breached through an irrigation canal and accumulated,
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over years, in the Imperial Valley’s geographic low-point 236 feet or 72 meters below sea
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level.
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That massive puddle still exists today, but some of the water has slowly evaporated through
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time, leaving an ever saltier, dirtier accumulation of water.
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Thousands more feet below, however, are a number of underground volcanoes that superheat
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water to hundreds of degrees.
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If one brings that water to the surface, the pressure change leads to it transforming into
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steam and steam, of course, is what most power plants use to drive turbines.
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Traditional power plants use coal or natural gas to heat water up into steam, but this
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steam is created by the earth—meaning its carbon-free.
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That’s why Berkshire Hathaway Energy has built 10 geothermal energy plants in the area,
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but, crucially, this superheated water is filled with something else: lithium.
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Therefore, these geothermal plants are planning on adding an extra step in their process to
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extract lithium from the briny steam they use.
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Now, there are certainly significant technological hurdles that stand between now and a future
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of commercially-competitive lithium production at the Salton Sea, especially as the metal
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only represents a tiny portion of the slurry of materials found in the water, but the lithium
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is there.
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Berkshire Hathaway Energy, as the largest existing energy company working around the
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Salton Sea, is leading the charge thanks in part to a sizable federal grant, and expects
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to have its demonstration facility up and running later in 2022.
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A number of other competitors have already started developing their lithium-extraction
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plays around the Salton Sea, meaning America’s first lithium boom-town might already be a
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foregone conclusion.
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These are the kind of solutions needed as the world transitions to electric mobility.
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Electric vehicles, due to their reliance on batteries, are just dirtier than internal
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combustion vehicles to produce.
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That being said, the vast majority of emissions from cars, including from EVs themselves,
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come not from the production of vehicles but from driving them.
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The science on the issue is sound—electric vehicles, from production to use to scrapping,
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are responsible for about 75% less emissions than their internal combustion counterparts,
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even on current, fossil-fuel based electric grids.
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Anyone who argues the opposite is either misinformed or attempting to disinform, and that gap will
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only widen as grids continue to decarbonize.
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However, there can be better alternatives to better alternatives.
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In the coming lithium gold-rush, corners can and likely will be cut.
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The question the world will have to grapple with is whether it’s worth destroying pristine
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environments like Thacker Pass in the name of environmentalism—whether slowing the
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issue on a global level is worth accelerating it on a local level.
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Then, when the answer inevitably gravitates towards yes, the world will have to grapple
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with who must confront that local devastation.
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If the answer continues to be to place the burden on the world’s most vulnerable, then
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even if the steady march of climate change is curbed, will the world have truly succeeded
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in stopping its effects?
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Is it worth sending teenagers to die in a war to prevent the propagation of terrorist
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organizations?
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Is it worth depressing an economy to slow the spread of a pandemic?
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It it worth allowing individuals to own guns for self-protection even if it allows easier
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access for bad actors?
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Determining what is an acceptable sacrifice has historically led to some of the most contentious,
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perennial political issues in history.
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Here, it’s happening again: the public needs to decide, with the fate of the world on top
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of them, how much bad should be allowed for the greater good.
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[976]
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[980]
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That makes your meals greener, but on top of that, HelloFresh makes cooking a lot more
[996]
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[997]
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[1001]
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[1024]
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