Showing posts with label Ahead of The Herd. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ahead of The Herd. Show all posts

Saturday, November 10, 2012

The Truth About Fracking







DeGette Committee Investigation Discovers High Volume Of Toxic Chemicals In Fracking Fluids Used In Colorado

WASHINGTON, DC — Today U.S. Rep. Diana DeGette (CO-1) joined her colleagues, Reps.  Henry A. Waxman and Edward J. Markey, in releasing a new report that provides the first comprehensive national inventory of chemicals used by hydraulic fracturing companies during the drilling process.   The report revealed extraordinarily high levels of carcinogens being injected into the ground on fracking projects all across the country, with Colorado having some of the highest levels in the nation..."

Friday, February 17, 2012

Rick Mills: Ahead Of The Herd: Graphite: Pencil It In lmr.v, ilc.v, tnr.v, czx.v, rm.v, abn.v, asm.v, btt.v, bva.v, bvg.v, epz.v, fst.v, gbn.v, hao.v, jnn.v, ks.v, ktn.v, kxm.v, mgn, mxr.v, rvm.to, svb, ura.v, nup.ax, srz.ax, usa.ax

  

  Rick Mills is always looking forward and the name of his website says it all. He was one of the first to cover Gold, Uranium, Potash, Rare Earths and Lithium. Now he has written a very good introductory article on Graphite. With buzz about Electric Cars, lithium batteries and graphite spreading around he is putting industry insiders play on the investors radar screens again.
  Rick is covering TNR Gold and in the Copper, Gold, Rare Earths and International Lithium in Lithium space and we have put Lomiko Metals on our watch list again with its new graphite project acquisition recently.
  We are adding Graphite plays to our Strategic Commodities plays now with Lithium, Rare Earths and Copper. Next Big Thing - Electric Cars will drive the demand for these commodities in years to come and Energy Transition is the name of the game now.


Richard (Rick) Mills
Ahead of the Herd

As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information

Sometime between 1500 and 1565 a large graphite deposit was discovered in Cumbria, England. Because the graphite was extremely pure and solid it could easily be sawed into sticks. The graphite was actually thought to be a form of lead and called plumbago - Latin for lead ore.

The Borrowable Mine was soon ordered to be put under armed guard by Queen Elizabeth because the “lead” could be used to line the moulds for making her armies cannonballs. But black marketers managed to smuggle out the graphite for continued use in pencils. Artists from all over the known world quickly learned to appreciate the qualities of Cumbria’s graphite but it wasn’t until 1795 that Nicholas Conte learned to mix graphite powder with clay and fire it in a furnace to actually make something with the equivalent quality of Borrowables plumbago.

Today graphite (named for the Greek word meaning "to write") is attracting the attention of investors, and for just as good a reason as it once attracted all those artists 500 years ago.

Carbon

By mass carbon is the fourth most abundant element in the universe (after hydrogen, helium, and oxygen) and it’s the 15th most abundant element in the Earth's crust. Carbon is present in all known life forms and is the second (oxygen is first) most abundant element by mass - about 18.5% - in the human body.

Carbon is the stuff of life, it is the foundation, the chemical basis, of every living thing on Earth, yet because of its pervasive familiarity we all take it for granted.

As investors we might want to rethink that.

Allotropes are structural modifications of an element - the allotropes of carbon include:
  • Diamond - The carbon atoms are bonded together in a tetrahedral lattice arrangement
  • Fullerenes - The carbon atoms are bonded together in spherical, tubular, or ellipsoidal formations
  • Graphite - The carbon atoms are bonded together in sheets of a hexagonal lattice
  • Graphene  - A flat two-dimensional sheet of carbon atoms
Graphite

Graphite has long been used in the aviation, automotive, sports, steel and plastic industries, as well as in the manufacture of bearings and lubricants. Graphite is an excellent conductor of heat and electricity, is corrosion and heat resistant and is also strong and light.

Currently, the automotive and steel industries are the largest consumers of graphite and demand across both industries is rising at five percent per annum.

The steel industry uses graphite as liners for ladles and crucibles, they use it in the bricks which line blast furnaces and to increase the carbon content of steel. Graphite has already replaced asbestos in automotive brake linings and pads and is used for gaskets and clutch materials. Sparks plugs are also made incorporating graphite.

But demand for graphite has been rising for other applications as well; Flexible graphite sheets, lithium-ion and vanadium batteries, fuel cells, semi conductors, nuclear, wind and solar power.

Graphoil 

Graphoil is flexible graphite sheets and one of the fastest growing graphite markets. Flexible graphite is desirable for compression packing and gaskets, whose ability to seal comes from filling gaps through which fluid might flow.

Flexible graphite products have valuable properties:
  • Free from creep under constant load
  • Stable from cryogenic temperatures far below zero to temperatures well above the melting point of most ferrous and non-ferrous metals
  • Resists a wide range of corrosive materials
  • Nuclear radiation resistant even when exposed to massive doses of radiation
  • Fire-safe in the presence of highly volatile fluids and extremely high temperatures
Nuclear Power

Graphite plays a key role in many current, and future, nuclear reactor designs. The next generation nuclear reactor (the INL-led Next Generation Nuclear Plant (NGNP) and other proposed high-temperature, gas-cooled reactors) temperatures are expected to reach as high as 1,000 °C in their cores – graphite, having a higher melting point then steel, doesn't burn until 3,000 degrees Celsius. Because graphite has a huge heat-absorbing capacity it’s also used to keep nuclear fuel at safe temperatures during unexpected events - as an aside graphite is also used as a heat sink in computers.

China’s Pebble bed reactors (PBR) are a graphite moderated, gas cooled nuclear reactor. The base of the PBR's design is the spherical (billiard ball-sized) fuel elements called pebbles. In the PBR, thousands of pebbles are amassed to create a reactor core. The pebbles are made of pyrolytic graphite (a protective graphite coating which moderates the pace of nuclear reactions) and they contain thousands of micro fuel particles called TRISO particles. These TRISO fuel particles consist of a fissile material such as 235U. These reactors are cooled by non-explosive helium gas instead of depending on a steady source of water.

Substantial amounts of graphite are required to charge the reactor at startup – 3000 tons and a percentage of the balls must be replaced each year as the fuel is spent necessitating a further 600 to 1000 tons of graphite each year of operation. China has one operating prototype, is now building two commercial units and plans to have 30 Pebble Bed nuclear reactors in operation by 2020.

Fuel Cells

The two major types of fuel cells - the phosphoric acid fuel cell (PAFC) and the proton electrolyte membrane fuel cell (PEMFC) - currently under development rely heavily on graphitized carbon. PAFCs are for stationary power generation (primary or backup power for remote locations such as cell phone towers), whereas PEMFC's have attracted widespread interest for use in transportation applications.

A fuel cell is not a battery - a battery is an energy storage device, it will stop producing electrical energy when the chemical reactants are consumed or it needs to be recharged. The fuel cell is an energy conversion device and will produce electrical energy as long as the fuel, and the oxidant, are fed to the electrodes.

More and more fuel-cell applications are in development every year and fuel cell technologies rely heavily on graphite - the proton exchange fuel cell (PEMFC) requires 80-100 pounds of graphite per vehicle.

"Large-scale fuel cell applications are being developed that could consume as much graphite as all other uses combined." U.S. Geological Survey

Solar Thermal Collectors

The biggest limitation of Solar or Photovoltaic (PV) panels is that they can use only a fraction of the sunlight that hits them, the rest of the sunlight turns into heat which actually hurts the performance of the panels.

An alternative that can make use of all of the sunlight, including light frequencies PVs can't use, is the solar thermal collector – they collect heat that’s used to boil the water to make the steam which drives the turbine which creates the electricity.

To further increase the efficiency of solar collectors, nanoparticles - particles a billionth of a meter in size - are added into the heat transfer oils normally used in solar thermal power plants. In laboratory tests nanoparticles increased heat collection efficiency by up to 10 percent. 100 grams of nanoparticles provides the same heat-collecting surface area as an entire football field.

Graphite nanoparticles are very efficient heat collectors.

Vanadium Redox Batteries

When the sun doesn’t shine and the wind doesn’t blow neither solar or wind plants are generating electricity, these two green energies need batteries to store the excess energy they can produce under optimal conditions. The vanadium redox battery (VRB) could be the perfect answer as they:
  • Have unlimited capacity simply by increasing the size of their storage tanks
  • Can be left completely discharged for long periods of time with no ill effects
  • Have low maintenance requirements
  • Can be recharged by simply replacing the electrolyte
  • Have a nominal environmental footprint
VRB’s also require almost 300 tonnes of flake graphite per 1,000 megawatts of storage capacity.

Lithium-ion Batteries

The most important application for increased graphite demand might come from the lithium-ion batteries found in electric vehicle batteries and used to power our modern consumer electronics.

While lithium is the cathode the anode is graphite and these batteries need 10 to 30 (depending on which expert you are listening to) times more graphite than lithium and the lithium-ion battery industry is growing at a 30 to 40% annual rate.

As many as six million electric vehicles might be manufactured in 2020, each of them requiring 40 pounds of graphite for its battery system – the electric motorcycle and scooter markets are growing even faster.

Lithium-ion batteries are also crucial to the consumer electronics industry – power tools, cell telephones, laptops, tablets and media players etc.

Graphene

Graphite
If you took a close look, a very close look, at a graphite pencil lead you will see layer upon layer of carbon atoms, multiple two dimensional planes that are loosely bonded to their neighbors.

The reason graphite works so well as a writing material, and industrial lubricant, is because the layers of atoms slip easily over one another - the layered structure facilitates easy cleavage along the planes.Graphene


Each of those single layer of atoms is grapheme.

Separating the individual layers of graphite sets the electrons free and allows carbon to behave…differently.

Properties

Graphene has unique combinations of optical, electrical and mechanical properties:
  • Astonishing electrical conductivity - Graphene has the highest current density (a million times that of copper) at room temperature; the highest intrinsic mobility (100 times more than in silicon); and can carry more electricity more efficient, faster and with more precision than any other material
  • Graphene also beats diamond in thermal conductivity - it's better than any other known material
  • It is the thinnest and strongest material known to man; 200 times stronger than steel, is almost invisible and weightless, stretches like rubber - graphene can stretch up to 20 percent of its length - and yet is the stiffest known material, even stiffer than diamond
  • Graphene is the most impermeable material ever discovered
Uses

Touch  Screens

Graphene is transparent in infra-red and visible light, absorbing just 2.3 percent of light that lands on it. But, with your naked eye, you can see a single layer of graphene laid on a blank piece of white paper.

Indium Tin Oxide (ITO), the current touch screen material of choice, absorbs 10 percent of incident light, but it’s quite brittle, the exact opposite of graphene.  Graphene is ideal for use in touch screens.

According to some reports the world has only 5-10 years of ITO reserves remaining and prices already exceed US$700,000 per tonne.

Photovoltaic (PV) Cells

Graphene has no band gap - everything is accepted.

What this means is that graphene solar panels have a huge advantage over silicon solar panels - graphene can absorb light from all over the solar spectrum, whereas silicon is confined to just certain frequencies.

That makes graphene solar panels much more efficient than any other material - instead of waiting 10-12 years for payback it might come as quickly as 5 years. 

Transistors

It is possible to induce a small band gap in graphene by doping it, which means grapheme can be used a transistor - you need the band gap if you want to be able to turn the transistor off.

Spintronics

Spintronics is a technology for controlling not only individual electronics, but also their spin, this increases the amount of information that can be stored per electron - data is stored in the spin of an electron, not its presence. Since graphene has a long spin diffusion length the technology promises to increase the efficiency with which devices consume power and increase data storage capability.

Superconductivity At Room Temperature

The mean free path is the distance an electron can travel freely without bumping into something, or having its path disrupted by scattering – both cause resistance which means heat is generated.

In graphene, the mean free path is 65 microns — long enough that electronic components could be made that would operate at ambient temperatures with virtually no resistance.

We’re talking ambient temperature unimpeded conduction of electrons - superconductivity at room temperature.

Sensors

Graphene is the most impermeable material ever discovered, not even helium atoms can squeeze through. Highly sensitive gas detectors can be manufactured because the smallest quantity of a gas will get caught in its lattice producing an electrical signal that flags the presence of the chemical.

Medical imaging devices that won’t do the harm X-rays cause are possible, as are strain sensors – when you pull or push the strain can be monitored – this could be useful for buildings in earthquake prone areas or in airplane wings. 

DNA sequencing

If you pass a strand of DNA through a sheet of grapheme with a small gap in it the electrical properties of graphene change on exposure to each base pair. Because graphene is 2D, it can "read" one base at a time, making it much more accurate than anything used today.

Derivatives

All the chemical derivatives of graphene are useful. You can dissolve graphene and the solutions (fluorographene, graphene oxide, hydrogenated grapheme) have applications in printable electronics that are already ten times better than current state of the art technology.

Criticality   

In 2010 a European Commission included graphite among the 14 materials it considered high in both economic importance and supply risk. The British Geological Survey listed graphite as one of the materials to most likely be in short supply globally.

The US has also declared graphite a critical material. The U.S. Department of Homeland Security, and the State Department, said America could be hurt if terrorists were to disable graphite mines in China.

Market

The natural graphite market is 1-1.2 million tons per year and consists of several different forms of graphite – flake, amorphous and lump. Historical applications primarily use amorphous and lump graphite, most newly emerging technologies and applications use flake graphite. Of the up to 1.2 million tons of graphite that are processed each year just 40% is flake.

China, India and Canada are responsible for most graphite mining and processing with China producing the lion’s share at 70–80%. China’s production is 70% amorphous and lower value small flake graphite.

Currently China imports a significant amount of North Korea’s large flake graphite production raising considerable doubts in regards to China’s abilities to ramp up its graphite supply. Indeed China has already taken steps to retain its graphite resources by restricting its export quota - China imposed a 20% export duty, a 17% VAT and also closed state owned enterprises.

“The days of cheap, abundant graphite from China are over.” Industrial Minerals Magazine May, 2011

It’s thought that the increased use of lithium-ion batteries could gobble up well over 1.6 Mt of flake graphite per year by 2020 - only flake, upgraded to 99.9% purity and synthetic graphite (made from petroleum coke, a very expensive process) can be used in lithium-ion batteries.

“Annual flake graphite production will have to increase by a factor of six by 2020 to meet incremental lithium carbonate requirements for batteries.” Canaccord research report

The U.S. Geological Survey says large-scale fuel cell applications are being developed that could consume as much graphite as all other uses combined – a bold statement, but even if only half of the USGS demand is realized graphite use is going to explode just because of fuel cells, let alone other known demand drivers and new applications.

What if the current market almost doubles – new demand, between now and 2020, comes in at one million tonnes on top of the existing 1.2 million?

Today’s graphite producers, other than the ones in China, are going to have to produce more and junior companies are going to have to get busy and start to develop deposits. There will be a premium placed on mines in stable, safe areas for investment.

Since a large scale producer puts out 20,000 to 40,000 tons per year that’s a lot of new mines and a lot of opportunity for investors – one million tonnes divided by 40,000 could be the equivalent of up to twenty five mines worth of new production needed – and that’s a severe low-balling of the experts forecast increased usage numbers.

Consider also that most of the mines expected to come online, and the ones already in production, will not produce the highest grades of graphite - crystalline large flake – which runs between 94% and 97% carbon and starts at 80 or higher mesh size. Indeed most will produce medium, small-flake, lump and amorphous graphite.

Conclusion

The extraction of graphite and its processing is very well known in the west and western countries are the leaders in graphite and graphene application research.

China is not going to be much of a factor in the large flake graphite market, except perhaps as a future importer - the west has large flake graphite deposits, knows how to extract and refine the graphite and are the leaders in technological advancements regarding this space and demand is going to grow exponentially.

New, high-tech applications require more and more graphite production while graphene seems to be a wonder material and a lot of time, effort and money is being spent researching it – 3000 research reports were written just in 2010.

An investor needs to be doing his/her due diligence on junior resource companies with near surface, high grade large flake deposits close to all necessary infrastructure in politically safe jurisdictions.

Graphite should be on every investors radar screen. Is it on yours?

If not, maybe it should be.

Richard (Rick) Mills
rick@aheadoftheherd.com

If you're interested in learning more about a specific graphite junior, the junior resource sector, bio-tech and technology sectors please come and visit us at www.aheadoftheherd.com

Site membership is free. No credit card or personal information is asked for.

 ***

Richard is host of Aheadoftheherd.com and invests in the junior resource sector. His articles have been published on over 400 websites, including: Wall Street Journal, SafeHaven, Market Oracle, USAToday, National Post, Stockhouse, Lewrockwell, Uranium Miner, Casey Research, 24hgold, Vancouver Sun, SilverBearCafe, Infomine, Huffington Post, Mineweb, 321Gold, Kitco, Gold-Eagle, The Gold/Energy Reports, Calgary Herald, Resource Investor, Mining.com, Forbes, FNArena, Uraniumseek, and Financial Sense.

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 Legal Notice / Disclaimer

This document is not and should not be construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase or subscribe for any investment.

Richard Mills has based this document on information obtained from sources he believes to be reliable but which has not been independently verified; Richard Mills makes no guarantee, representation or warranty and accepts no responsibility or liability as to its accuracy or completeness. Expressions of opinion are those of Richard Mills only and are subject to change without notice. Richard Mills assumes no warranty, liability or guarantee for the current relevance, correctness or completeness of any information provided within this Report and will not be held liable for the consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein or any omission.

Furthermore, I, Richard Mills, assume no liability for any direct or indirect loss or damage or, in particular, for lost profit, which you may incur as a result of the use and existence of the information provided within this Report."
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Sunday, June 26, 2011

Richard (Rick) Mills: Ahead of The Herd: Brine Mining the Puna for Potash and Lithium ilc.v tnr.v, czx.v, cgp.v, alk.ax, lmr.v, rm.v, nup.ax, srz.ax, usa.ax, jnn.v, abn.v, ura.v, mxr.v, tsla, res, mcp, avl.to, quc.v, cee.v, sqm, fmc, roc, li.v, wlc.v, clq.v, lit, nsany, byddf, gm, dai, rno.pa, hev, aone, vlnc

    

  We are following Richard Mills on this blog and he has written another very insightful article on the Brine  Mining and - what we call Investment For Life - Potash and Lithium. Richard provides a very deep knowledge of the industry, but can tell the story very efficiently in a straight forward language giving the necessary focus points for the investment decisions. His ability to spot the future trends and companies making it gives him a wide following among junior mining community. 
  Richard Mills follows a number of companies involved in Lithium and Potash Brine Mining and developing, you can find them on his website with another great articles. Recently he has wrote a piece on International Lithium - we are following here and our Top Pick in the sector; and he was one of the first letter writers to write about Lithium juniors in 2009 including TNR Gold - our Top Pick in Rare Earths, Gold and Copper, Rodinia Lithium - our another Lithium play, Western Lithium, Lithium One and Canada Lithium among others. His Lithium ABC became a classic in this investment sector.


ILC currently holds nine highly prospective projects for lithium and rare metals. One of the more prospective lithium properties in ILC’s property portfolio is the Mariana lithium brine project in the mining friendly province of Salta, Argentina.

The Mariana Lithium Brine project is on the Puna plateau which sits at an elevation of 4,000m, stretches for 1800 km along the Central Andes and attains a width of 350–400 km. The Puna covers a portion of Argentina, Chile and Bolivia and hosts an estimated 70 - 80% of global lithium brine reserves."



Please, do not forget, that we own stocks we are writing about and have position in these companies. We are not providing any investment advise on this blog and there is no solicitation to buy or sell any particular company here. Always consult with your qualified financial adviser before making any investment decisions.

By Richard (Rick) Mills
Ahead of the herd

As a general rule, the most successful man in life is the man who has the best information

The Puna plateau sits at an elevation of 4,000m, stretches for 1800 km along the Central Andes and attains a width of 350–400 km. The Puna covers a portion of Argentina, Chile and Bolivia and hosts an estimated 70 - 80% of global lithium brine reserves.

The evaporate mineral deposits on the plateau - which may contain potash, lithium and boron - are formed by intense evaporation under hot, dry and windy conditions in an endorheic basin - endorheic basins are closed drainage basins that retain water and allow no outflow - precipitation and inflow water from the surrounding mountains only leaves the system by evaporation and seepage. The surface of such a basin is typically occupied by a salt lake or salt pan. Most of these salt lakes - called salars - contain brines which are capable of providing more than one potentially economic product.

This Puna Plateau area of the Andean mountains - where the borders of Argentina, Bolivia and Chile meet and bounded by the Salar de Atacama, the Salar de Uyuni and the Salar de Hombre Muerto - is often referred to as the Lithium Triangle and the three countries mentioned are the Lithium ABC’s.

Brine “Mining” 

The salt rich brines are pumped from beneath the crust that’s on the salar and fed into a series of large, shallow ponds. Initial 200 to +1,000 parts per million (ppm) lithium brine solution is concentrated by solar evaporation and wind up to 6,000 ppm lithium after 18 - 24 months.

The extraction process is low cost/high margin and battery grade lithium carbonate can be extracted.

Hypothetical Brine Beneficiation Flowsheet

The above diagram was designed to show that several commercial products can be recovered from typical brine and that the recovery takes place in a series of steps over the entire evaporation process. Note that the final product in each step may require processing in a specialized plant. Also please note that the actual sequence of process steps may vary from brine to brine, and as such, the process steps shown above may not be in the correct order for any specific brine.

The key factors that determine the quality, economics and attractiveness of brines are:
  • Potassium content
  • Lithium content
  • Presence of contaminants ie magnesium (Mg)
  • Porosity
  • Net evaporation rate
  • Recoverable by-products
  • Infrastructure – or lack thereof
  • Country risk
  • 100% control over production
  • Low capex, low production costs, high margin products
A common industry axiom says that the ratio of Mg to Li in brines must be below the range of 9:1 or 10:1 to be economical. This is because the Mg has to be removed by adding slaked lime to the brine - the slaked lime reacts with the magnesium salts and removes them from the water.

The porosity of a rock is expressed as a percentage and refers to that portion of the rock that is void space - rock that is composed of perfectly round and equal sized grains will have a porosity of 45%. Fluids and gases will be found in the void spaces within the rock.

Ten million cubic meters of brine bearing rock with a porosity of 10% will contain one million cubic meters of brine fluid. A cubic meter is equivalent to a kiloliter.

By oil and gas standards a porosity of 10% is quite low, but brines are less viscous than hydrocarbon fluids and will flow more easily through rocks with lower porosity and permeability characteristics.

A major factor affecting capital costs is the net evaporation rate – this determines the area of the evaporation ponds necessary to increase the grade of the plant feed. These evaporation ponds can be a major capital cost. The Salar de Atacama has higher evaporation rates (3200 mm pan evaporation rate per year (py) and <15 mm py of precipitation) than other salt plains in the world and evaporation takes place all year long.

Contributing to efficient solar evaporation and concentration of the Puna Plateau brines are:
  • Low rainfall
  • Low humidity
  • High winds
  • High elevations
  • Warm days
A company should have 100% control over the production rate from their salar. It’s possible an aquifer can become diluted - over producing can impact the brine’s salt concentrations and chemical compositions - or depleted by too many wells sucking up more brine than should be produced.

If two or more companies have straws (wells) into the same salar legal battles might result over the sharing of the resources.

Potash is Fuel for Food

Potash is used as a major agricultural component in 150 countries but the largest importers of potash are China, India, the US and Brazil.

Potassium sulfate is commonly used in fertilizers, providing both potassium and sulfur. Potash is the common name for potassium chloride.

The basic fundamentals of the global potash market are hard to ignore:
  • An increasing global population - the world's population is steadily increasing and is expected to reach +9 billion people by 2050. The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) reported they think that the total world demand for agricultural products will be 60 percent higher in 2030 than it is today.
  • Increasing incomes in developing countries will lead to more people being able to afford protein rich diets – a western style diet heavy in meat - which means more grain consumption.
  • Decreasing arable land - arable land is being lost at the rate of about 40,000 square miles per year. Land is being used for production of bio-fuels, topsoil is eroded away by wind and water and the agriculture land base is being paved over as we become more and more urbanized. Farmers need to produce more food on less land. There is only one way this can be done and that’s with an increase in the use of fertilizer.
The current potash market is estimated at 50 million tonnes annually and is projected to grow at a compounded annual rate of 3-4%. Potash is a crucial element in fertilizer and has no commercial substitute.

Lithium

The world’s future energy course is being charted today because of the ramifications of peak oil and a need to reduce our carbon footprints.

A whole new industry - a global wide automotive and industrial lithium-ion battery industry - is being built. As a result of lithium-ion battery demand for hybrid-electric and electric cars the increase in demand for lithium carbonate is expected to increase four-fold by 2017.

Lithium-ion batteries have become the rechargeable battery of choice in cell phones, computers, hybrid-electric cars and electric cars. Chrysler, Dodge, Ford, GM, Mercedes-Benz, Mitsubishi, Nissan, Saturn, Tesla and Toyota have all announced plans to build lithium-ion battery powered cars.

Lithium carbonate is also an important industrial chemical:
  • It forms low-melting fluxes with silica and other materials
  • Glasses derived from lithium carbonate are useful in ovenware
  • Cement sets more rapidly when prepared with lithium carbonate, and is useful for tile adhesives
  • When added to aluminum trifluoride, it forms LiF which gives a superior electrolyte for the processing of aluminum
  • Lithium carbonate can be used in a type of carbon dioxide sensor.
Lithium is not traded publicly - and is usually distributed in a chemical form such as lithium carbonate (Li2CO3) - instead it’s sold directly to end users for a negotiated price per tonne of Lithium carbonate (Li2CO3).

Production figures are often quoted in lithium carbonate equivalent quantities. By weight approximately 18.8% of lithium carbonate is lithium. Therefore 1kg of lithium is the equivalent of 5.3 kg of lithium carbonate.

Lithium-ion batteries are quickly becoming the most prevalent type of battery used in everything from laptops to cell phones to hybrid and fully electric cars to short term power storage devices for wind and solar generated power.

Sodium Chloride (rock salt or halite)

The principal use for salt is in the chemical manufacturing business - chloralkali and synthetic soda ash producers use salt as their primary raw material.

Salt is used in many applications and almost every industry:
  • Cooking
  • Manufacturing pulp and paper
  • Setting dyes in textiles and fabric
  • Producing soaps, detergents, and other bath products
  • Major source of industrial chlorine and sodium hydroxide
Global demand for salt is forecast to grow 2.5 percent per year to 305 million metric tons in 2013.

Solar evaporation is the most popular and most economical method of producing salt. China is the world’s largest consumer of salt – other than the dietary needs of 1.3 billion people - there’s an enormous chemical manufacturing industry being built in China.

Boron

Boron combines with oxygen and other elements to form boric acid, or inorganic salts called borates.

Borates are used for:
  • Insulation fiberglass
  • Textile fiberglass
  • Heat-resistant glass
  • Detergents, soaps and personal care products
  • Ceramic and enamel frits and glazes
  • Ceramic tile bodies
  • Agricultural micronutrients
  • Wood treatments
  • Polymer additives 
  • Pest control products
  • Boron is an essential component in the manufacture of borosilicate glass used in LCD screens
Boric Acid uses:
  • As an antiseptic/anti-bacterial compound
  • Insecticide
  • Flame retardant
  • In nuclear power plants to control the fission rate of uranium*
  • As a precursor of other chemical compounds
*Boric acid is used in nuclear power plants to slow down the rate at which fission occurs. Boron is also dissolved into the spent fuel cooling pools containing used fuel rods. Natural boron is 20% boron-10 which can absorb a lot of neutrons. When you add boric acid to the reactor coolant – or to the spent fuel rod cooling pools - the probability of fission is reduced.

World production of borates remains mostly concentrated in the US and Turkey – these two countries account for 75% of supply.

Chinese boron - both in terms of quantity and grade - is inadequate to meet domestic demand so the country is now the largest importer of both natural borates and boric acid.


Conclusion

Potash and agriculture will be one of the top investment themes over the next 20 to 30 years - world population growth and three billion people climbing the protein ladder are elephants in the dining room. Our population has nearly doubled since 1970. We add 80 million people to our global population each year - tonight, there will be 220,000 new mouths to feed at the dinner table.

The rechargeable power needs of our modern society has made lithium a serious player in the commodity markets. Lithium makes an excellent battery for use in a wide range of applications - batteries using lithium have been found to have a high energy to weight ratio, can be moulded into amazing shapes and have longer lives than conventional batteries.

And when used as a rechargeable battery there is no memory effect.

There are significant savings to be had in the pricing of lithium from brines for lithium miners with quality projects close to all necessary infrastructure.

Investing in a macro trend has always been the most dependable way to make money - rising food prices are a macro trend with a long term time horizon, so is the electrification of our transportation system.

Are both these global macro trends on your radar screen?

If not, maybe they should be.

Richard (Rick) Mills
rick@aheadoftheherd.com
www.aheadoftheherd.com

If you're interested in learning more about the junior resource, bio-tech and technology sectors please come and visit us at www.aheadoftheherd.com

Site membership, and our AOTH newsletter, are free. No credit card or personal information is asked for.

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Richard is host of Aheadoftheherd.com and invests in the junior resource sector. His articles have been published on over 300 websites, including: Wall Street Journal, SafeHaven, Market Oracle, USAToday, National Post, Stockhouse, Lewrockwell, Uranium Miner, Casey Research, 24hgold, Vancouver Sun, SilverBearCafe, Infomine, Huffington Post, Mineweb, 321Gold, Kitco, Gold-Eagle, The Gold/Energy Reports, Calgary Herald, Resource Investor, Mining.com, Forbes, FNArena, Uraniumseek, and Financial Sense.

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Legal Notice / Disclaimer

This document is not and should not be construed as an offer to sell or the solicitation of an offer to purchase or subscribe for any investment. Richard Mills has based this document on information obtained from sources he believes to be reliable but which has not been independently verified; Richard Mills makes no guarantee, representation or warranty and accepts no responsibility or liability as to its accuracy or completeness. Expressions of opinion are those of Richard Mills only and are subject to change without notice. Richard Mills assumes no warranty, liability or guarantee for the current relevance, correctness or completeness of any information provided within this Report and will not be held liable for the consequence of reliance upon any opinion or statement contained herein or any omission. Furthermore, I, Richard Mills, assume no liability for any direct or indirect loss or damage or, in particular, for lost profit, which you may incur as a result of the use and existence of the information provided within this Report.

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Richard Mills does not own shares of any companies mentioned in this report.
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