An almost inexhaustible reserve of lithium discovered in Canada
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I wonder if Elon will call for couping Canada to gain access to it.
Tragically, he is a citizen. He can just walk in and do whatever the hell he wants.
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This is the part that I find interesting:
If Cisco ultimately proves its larger target, the project could anchor a domestic lithium supply chain linking Quebec mines and battery factories.
The federal and Ontario governments have said repeatedly that they want to build a lithium battery industry. I worry we are arriving too late now that Sodium Ion is upon us but I am probably being too pessimistic.
None of that depends on this deposit specifically though. Canada already has lots of Lithium reserves. Much of it is in the same district as this. Of course this could end up being the biggest and truly be “the anchor” I suppose.
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The federal and Ontario governments have said repeatedly that they want to build a lithium battery industry. I worry we are arriving too late now that Sodium Ion is upon us but I am probably being too pessimistic.
None of that depends on this deposit specifically though. Canada already has lots of Lithium reserves. Much of it is in the same district as this. Of course this could end up being the biggest and truly be “the anchor” I suppose.
2nd best time is now. Always.
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This is just an ad for a satellite exploration company. It is not even that big a deal.
From the article, “That potential would place Cisco among the largest hard-rock lithium deposits now being tracked in the James Bay region.”
So, not even the biggest in the area.
Also, Sodium Ion is about to make Lithium much less of a big deal.
Still great economically but hardly as world changing as the headline makes out.
Sodium Ion is about to make Lithium much less of a big deal.
Sodium Ion is great diversity source for batteries, but they are inferior in many respects.
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I am sure you are thinking of BreX.
Other than Canadian investors and mining as a general theme, I cannot think of a single reason to link the two stories.
Also, BreX never claimed “inexhaustible” anything and was certainly not “the last time” for anything either.
Canada has more mining companies and mining investment than any country in the world. These kinds of discoveries are common-place. There have been many, many discoveries and success stories in the decades since BreX.
And this is just another Lithium deposit. Not the biggest in the world and probably not even the biggest in the James Bay district.
BreX deposit was in Indonesia.
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Congrats on being the only person that apparently read the article before commenting.
Thanks. Honestly I was just excited to nerd out about geology, but I guess I shouldn’t be surprised this website I’ve never seen before does clickbait.
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Sodium Ion is about to make Lithium much less of a big deal.
Sodium Ion is great diversity source for batteries, but they are inferior in many respects.
Other than “energy density” they’re better in every way imo. Safer, cheaper, more sustainable, wider operating temp range, big fan
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The federal and Ontario governments have said repeatedly that they want to build a lithium battery industry. I worry we are arriving too late now that Sodium Ion is upon us but I am probably being too pessimistic.
None of that depends on this deposit specifically though. Canada already has lots of Lithium reserves. Much of it is in the same district as this. Of course this could end up being the biggest and truly be “the anchor” I suppose.
Even if sodium takes off, lithium still has a higher energy density. Lots of uses will want that, even if it’s more expensive and dangerous.
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Other than “energy density” they’re better in every way imo. Safer, cheaper, more sustainable, wider operating temp range, big fan
Energy density is an important one, but there is also high voltage sag, and overstated capacity if you need a high draw at lower remaining voltage.
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AI-powered satellites point to a massive lithium resource at a Canadian project
Satellite-linked AI analysis suggests Quebec’s Cisco lithium project could contain about 329 million metric tons of ore, helping guide new drill targets within days.
Earth.com (www.earth.com)
I hope this doesn’t ruin peoples lifes. And if it affects anyone in Canada, I hope their revisit those laws on environmental pollution. There’s a reason why all the mining companies are in that country. Ecocide in third world countries is driven by that “blind spot” in their laws and I’m certain the majority of canadians don’t have the least idea of their complicity.