Author Topic: Appalachia Lithium Cache Could Power U.S. for Centuries  (Read 39 times)

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Offline Elderberry

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Appalachia Lithium Cache Could Power U.S. for Centuries
« on: May 01, 2026, 07:37:33 am »
Legal Insurrection by Leslie Eastman 5/1/2026

The newly published lithium resource numbers are estimates, and much more work needs to be done to take advantage of our current mineral capacity.

Back in February, I reported that the U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) estimated that 5 to 19 million tons of lithium are located in southwestern Arkansas. That is enough lithium to meet the world’s estimated 2030 demand for lithium nine times over.

Now the USGS is saying that Appalachia contains an estimated 2.3 million metric tons of undiscovered, economically recoverable lithium, enough to replace 328 years of U.S. imports at last year’s level.

    The southern Appalachians hold an estimated 1.43 million metric tons of lithium oxide, concentrated in the Carolinas, and the northern Appalachians hold an estimated 900,000 metric tons, concentrated in Maine and New Hampshire, according to estimates in a new USGS scientific paper published in Natural Resources Research. The lithium is present in pegmatites, large-grained rocks similar to granite.

    “This research shows that the Appalachians contain enough lithium to help meet the nation’s growing needs – a major contribution to U.S. mineral security, at a time when global lithium demand is rising rapidly,” said USGS Director Ned Mamula. “USGS mineral science is the leading edge in the effort to restore America’s mineral independence by mapping our nation’s mineral resources. Everything else follows on the science: permitting reform and other policy changes to support investment in clean, responsible mining to 21st century standards, and mining workforce training for new American jobs. The United States was the dominant world producer of lithium three decades ago, and this research highlights the abundant potential to reclaim our mineral independence.”

    The United States had one sole producer of lithium and relied on imports for more than half the lithium used last year, factors that contributed to its inclusion on the 2025 List of Critical Minerals published by the USGS. Lithium is used in the lithium-ion batteries that power computers, military equipment, vehicles, phones, electric tools, and energy-grid storage, as well as in aerospace alloys. Additional lithium is imported into the United States every year inside finished products made elsewhere and containing lithium-ion batteries. While Australia is the world’s largest producer of lithium, China is second, and accounts for the majority of world lithium refining and consumption.

More: https://legalinsurrection.com/2026/05/appalachia-lithium-cache-could-power-u-s-for-centuries/

https://twitter.com/SecretaryBurgum/status/2049201651236352373?