https://www.economist.com/science-and-technology/two-new-ways-of-extracting-lithium-from-brine/21807823 Skip to content * Menu * Weekly edition * Search Sign in * Featured + Climate change + Coronavirus + The Ukraine crisis + The French election + The Biden presidency + 1843 magazine + The world in brief * Sections + The world this week + Leaders + Letters + Briefing + United States + The Americas + Asia + China + Middle East & Africa + Europe + Britain + International + Business + Finance & economics + Science & technology + Culture + Graphic detail + Obituary + Special reports + Technology Quarterly + Essay + By Invitation + Schools brief + The World Ahead 2022 + What If? + Open Future + The Economist Explains * More + Newsletters + Podcasts + Films + Subscriber events + iOS app + Android app + Executive courses * Manage my account * Sign out Search [ ] Science & technologyFeb 26th 2022 edition Lithium production Two new ways of extracting lithium from brine How to increase the supply of an increasingly valuable metal [20220226_stp001] --------------------------------------------------------------------- Feb 26th 2022 * * * * AROUND 60% of the world's lithium, a metal in high demand for making batteries, comes from evaporation ponds, like that pictured overleaf, located in deserts in Argentina, Bolivia and Chile. These ponds, which can have individual areas of 60km^2 or more, are filled with lithium-rich brine pumped from underground. That brine, as the ponds' name suggests, is then concentrated in them by evaporation, after which it is treated to purge it of other metals, such as sodium and magnesium, and the lithium is precipitated as lithium carbonate. Listen to this story. Enjoy more audio and podcasts on iOS or Android . Your browser does not support the