Steve Double (St Austell and Newquay) (Con) I beg to move, That
this House has considered the supply of lithium and other critical
minerals. It is a great pleasure to be able to lead this debate
today, especially with you in the Chair, Sir Gary—I know you will
enjoy me talking extensively about Cornwall once again. This debate
is very important to me because this particular subject is relevant
to my constituents in St Austell and Newquay, and indeed Cornwall
as...Request free trial
(St Austell and Newquay)
(Con)
I beg to move,
That this House has considered the supply of lithium and other
critical minerals.
It is a great pleasure to be able to lead this debate today,
especially with you in the Chair, Sir Gary—I know you will enjoy
me talking extensively about Cornwall once again. This debate is
very important to me because this particular subject is relevant
to my constituents in St Austell and Newquay, and indeed Cornwall
as a whole. The main content of my remarks will be focused on
lithium extraction and production because we have an opportunity
in Cornwall to extract and provide substantial amounts of lithium
in the coming years. I recognise that lithium is by no means the
only critical mineral and that, beyond the application of
lithium-ion batteries, there will be many other industries that
are reliant on so many other kinds of critical minerals.
Critical minerals are defined as commodities other than fuel that
are crucial to a state's economy or national security, with a
supply chain that is particularly vulnerable for a number of
reasons, such as geopolitical tensions. Following a comprehensive
assessment by the British Geological Survey, which evaluated
minerals according to their economic vulnerability and supply
risks, the UK Government now identify 18 minerals as critical.
That list is kept under review and is not meant to be definitive,
but it will be informed by the science as it evolves and new
discoveries as well.
Those minerals are deemed critical because they underpin the
supply chains of modern-day technologies that are critical to
day-to-day life—from electronic communications, our smartphones
and our watches to the automotive industry, particularly electric
vehicles, as well as defence and cyber-security. They can also
have critical applications in other fields, including the
pharmaceutical industry. They are more relevant than ever before,
particularly as we transition to a green economy, and the
technologies that will help us to achieve that depend on those
minerals. Lithium, graphite, cobalt and nickel are needed in
large quantities to make electric vehicle batteries and they will
form the future backbone of the global automotive industry, while
wind turbines depend on permanent magnets built with rare earth
elements and copper. Without a sustainable and secure supply of
critical minerals for the coming decades, we will simply not be
able to meet our net zero target, maintain our critical defence
and security capabilities, or support the creation of thousands
of highly skilled, highly paid jobs in the tech, defence and
automotive industries.
It is therefore no surprise that the global demand for critical
minerals has shot up in recent times. In particular, there are
concerns about the supply of lithium, which is going to come
under huge pressures globally in the race to create more
lithium-ion-based products. Securing a reliable supply of lithium
is going to be crucial to our future economic prosperity.
High-grade deposits of lithium can currently be found in four
countries around the world—Argentina, Australia, Chile and
China—with those countries dominating the global market at
present.
Looking a bit further up the supply chain, China hosts 60% of the
world's lithium refining capacity. A report published at the end
of last year by the Foreign Affairs Committee found that China
looks ready to exploit the economic advantages arising from its
global dominance of the lithium refinery market, and there are
concerns that the UK has not yet taken steps to embrace the
opportunities provided by lithium and other critical minerals.
With technological advances constantly shifting towards a
reliance on more lithium-heavy batteries, lithium extraction will
need to increase significantly across the world to meet that
demand. Analysis has shown that by 2030, even with global supply
ramping up significantly, there will still be a 55% gap between
supply and demand, because of a sharp increase in the demand.
Other critical minerals used in the production of batteries also
appear to be in short supply, but analysts agree that of all the
minerals involved, the supply of lithium presents the greatest
challenge. But there is good news. The UK has a significant
deposit of this most critical of minerals in Cornwall. We have
known about its presence since the 1850s; I have seen mining maps
from the 1850s that point to the fact that lithium is present.
There was even a small mine in my constituency just outside St
Dennis that in world war two supplied small amounts of lithium
for the war effort. With demand and prices now rising, these
deposits have become viable for extraction.
The Government have recognised this issue. In July 2022, they
published the UK's first-ever critical minerals strategy, which
was a key landmark in the recognition of the importance of
securing a sustainable supply of these minerals. In March 2023,
it was reviewed and renewed with the “Critical Minerals Refresh”.
It was disappointing, however, that this latest policy paper made
no mention of the significant increase in the supply of critical
minerals needed to meet our net-zero targets and energy security
requirements. I am concerned that there seems to be a silo
mentality in some parts of Government, with different Departments
looking at different aspects of what is needed to reach net zero
and secure our future. We need a cross-Government, joined-up
approach to link up our priorities. Critical minerals challenges
and opportunities cannot be addressed in an isolated manner.
Some people have asked, “Well, why can't we just rely on imports
of these minerals?” As I have mentioned, China is looking to
dominate and control supply, and concerns have been expressed
about the ethical and environmental reputation of lithium
extraction around the world. People are becoming more aware of
the need to understand the supply chain of products they purchase
and the standards of supply and production. There is little point
in buying an electric vehicle if substantial environmental harm
is caused in the supply chain process.
Lithium and cobalt have attracted the most international
attention, with reports of the use of child labour in cobalt
mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo and abuses of
indigenous rights in lithium mining projects in South America
making global headlines. This proves there is a good reason why
the UK must shift its focus from getting its supply of critical
minerals abroad to securing them domestically wherever possible.
Having a domestic supply of critical minerals will mean that we
can control the standards of supply, maintaining the highest
environmental and ethical standards as well as reducing our
carbon footprint by not having to important these materials. It
will also keep value in the UK economy.
Reaching our net-zero target by 2050 presents a challenge and an
opportunity. Clean growth has been at the heart of the UK
Government's plan to level up our industry and economy. This
country aspires to be a world leader in electric vehicle and
battery technologies, but that will only be achieved by growing
our battery manufacturing. Importing will not be the answer. The
more we can source the materials we need domestically, the more
it will help us to achieve this goal. Doing so will mean that we
can create green jobs of the future within the UK, attracting
investment and growing our economy while reducing our carbon
emissions.
Cornwall has produced virtually every battery metal in the past.
It is imperative that we fully exploit the geological potential
the duchy offers once again to lay a path to our transition to
net zero. Cornwall powered the industrial revolution with copper
and tin, and we are ready to power the green revolution and be at
the heart of our nation's prosperity once again. We are fortunate
in Cornwall to have two excellent companies, both operating out
of my constituency of St Austell and Newquay, developing lithium
production in different ways: Cornish Lithium and Imerys British
Lithium. Without going into the technical detail, they are both
pioneering new methods of extracting and processing lithium from
hard rock and brines beneath Cornwall. Both are working to ensure
the highest environmental standards.
One of the questions I am most frequently asked is about how much
local opposition there is to the lithium extraction, largely
because of the industry's reputation around the world. The answer
is virtually none. That is, first, because mineral extraction is
what we do in Cornwall; it is in our DNA. We have been
continuously mining tin and copper for thousands of years and
china clay for the past 280, and the vast majority of people
locally are delighted to see the opportunity to revive our mining
heritage for a new era. Secondly, the lithium is located in
formerly mined land, so we are not digging up new countryside to
extract lithium. Just as importantly, both Imerys British Lithium
and Cornish Lithium are committed to working with local
communities. They have both recently held public engagement
sessions. At those events, they made clear their commitment to
the highest standards and the lowest possible impact on the
environment.
Between them, the Cornish Lithium and Imerys British Lithium
projects expect to be able to supply 40,000 tonnes a year of the
80,000 tonnes that UK car manufacturers will need for batteries.
That is half of the supply from a domestic source. That will put
the UK at a competitive advantage, as well as being good news for
the Cornish economy. Some people predict that lithium extraction
could be like tin all over again for Cornwall.
It is not just lithium; we still have tin and copper deposits in
Cornwall, where copper is potentially making a comeback, having
been the focal point of our first mining revolution. High-grade
qualities that are 16 times higher than the global average have
been discovered during the underground exploration of lithium at
the United Downs site, in the constituency of my right hon.
Friend the Member for Camborne and Redruth (). Also in his constituency
is South Crofty mine, an ancient tin mine with records of mining
in the area as early as the 16th century. Nowadays, the site
presents the fourth-highest-grade tin resource in the world. It
is under the ownership of Cornish Metals, which is working to
ensure that Cornwall can begin supplying our growing demand for
tin in the near future, and is expected to employ more than 200
people.
I was pleased to receive an update from the Minister that went
out to all MPs in a “Dear colleague” letter last week, informing
us of the establishment of the new Critical Imports Council and
its first quarterly meeting, which the Minister chaired. That is
welcome news. The council brings senior Government officials
together with stakeholders from industry and academia to discuss
the challenges and opportunities presented by the global supply
chain landscape. In an ever more uncertain and rapidly evolving
world economy, it is vital we work closely with strategic and
academic partners to help the UK adapt and respond to risks and
opportunities. I was pleased to learn that key sectors, including
manufacturing, technology, health and life sciences industries
were represented at the meeting. From medicines to smart watches,
critical minerals are needed now more than ever, so it is welcome
that the Critical Minerals Association, which provides the
secretariat to the all-party parliamentary group for critical
minerals, and the Institute for Minerals, Materials and Mining
are both members of the council.
I look forward to receiving further updates on the council's work
in the light of the discussions we will have on lithium and other
critical minerals today. I hope the Minister will pay close
attention to the work of businesses such as Imerys British
Lithium and Cornish Lithium in my mid-Cornwall constituency.
Indeed, I invite him to come to Cornwall to see for himself to
see the fantastic opportunities that lie underneath our
rocks.
I have engaged with both businesses over a number of years and
they have a few requests of Government to help and support them
as they develop to provide the lithium we will need. The first is
on regulation, which needs to be more coherent and
understandable. There is too much of a patchwork of regulations
at present, which is making it hard for the industry to navigate.
Between getting permits and planning, there are plenty of
bureaucratic hoops that they have to jump through. It is not
beyond the realms of imagination to have a body like the Coal
Authority for lithium and other critical minerals, to help
harmonise and make regulations clearer. The future for lithium,
with the right regulation, is extremely bright and offers an
opportunity for the UK economy.
Secondly, a range of standards on carbon intensity and ethical
traceability of supply chains is coming down the track. The UK
needs to prepare itself to take advantage of the opportunities
that presents. Lithium from Cornwall presents a huge opportunity
to meet those standards. It is in our interests to support
responsible, transparent and traceable supply chains. We should
consider developing a required traceability standard for all
lithium used in UK manufacturing. We should also consider
including lithium extraction within the carbon border adjustment
mechanism, which is currently being consulted on.
Post Brexit, we now have our own system of chemical
classification distinct from EU regulations, which allows us to
review whether those classifications are right in the light of
the best and most up-to-date scientific research. Crucially, it
also allows us to take a stand against proposals that are not
supported by the available science, such as the European
Chemicals Agency's proposal to classify lithium carbonate,
lithium hydroxide and lithium chloride as category 1A
reproductive toxicants in 2021.
Although that might be justified for some other toxic substances,
for lithium it is simply not backed up by the evidence. It is,
therefore, welcome news that the Health and Safety Executive
published its own opinion in August 2023, outlining concerns with
the evidence and methods used by its European counterpart. It
triggered a full assessment and called for further evidence. It
is important we examine all the evidence, but the process could
take several years, and no end date is currently in sight. That
could leave a highly capital intensive and critical industry
facing regulatory uncertainty. This could be a key Brexit
benefit, and I ask the Minister to give an update on what is
being done to accelerate this process to a conclusion as soon as
possible.
In summary, we hear a great deal about the need to strengthen our
military defence, and rightly so in an increasingly uncertain and
hostile world, but in my opinion not enough is said and not
enough attention is given to strengthening our supply of critical
minerals. We face a risk of a global supply chain of minerals
such as lithium being controlled by states that are not our
friends and allies. I urge the Government to do more in this
field. Cornwall stands ready to step up and play a significant
role in providing the secure, clean and ethical supply of some of
the critical minerals we are going to rely on the most in the
decades to come.
2.48pm
(Strangford) (DUP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship, Sir Gary. I thank
the hon. Member for St Austell and Newquay () for leading today's debate.
His speech was a tour de force, setting the scene so well. The
opportunities in his constituency are apparent and achievable,
and I support him. Northern Ireland may not have the access to
lithium that the hon. Gentleman mentioned, but we want to be part
of this advanced technological progress. That is the thrust of
where I am coming from.
It is great to be here because there is no doubt that in the not
so distant future we will be having more conversations about the
sustainability of and demand for lithium to meet our commitments
to net zero targets. We are here to have an in-depth discussion
on how we can plan for that.
In December 2023 a major milestone was reached: to deliver a
domestic supply of lithium in the UK with home-grown technology
and engineering. We have a very clear role to play in the world
and a clear role to play for ourselves in this great United
Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. We can all
contribute to and gain advantages from what is being brought
forward. Three companies from the north of England signed an
agreement aimed at delivering the UK's first commercial-scale
direct lithium extraction plant that combines UK-developed
technology, UK-sourced lithium-bearing saline brine and UK
process engineering expertise. Those are things that we can do
and I am pleased that the Minister and his Department are doing
just that.
It is always important to me that Northern Ireland can play a
role in modernising technology. It may not be possible for
Northern Ireland to have the extraction process to which the hon.
Member for St Austell and Newquay has referred but, none the
less, I think we can play our role. There is currently no supply
of lithium in Northern Ireland and, to date, sectors relating to
net zero, such as energy and transport, have represented a small
proportion of total mineral demand. But it has been projected
that the transition to net zero will result in a significant
increase in demand in the future. If that is where we are going,
and that is the target we are aiming for, I would like to see my
constituents, and people from across all constituencies of
Northern Ireland, being part of that. There is also a role for
Scotland, though it seems that there may not be the same
possibilities in Wales, unfortunately.
Some smaller businesses specialise in lithium batteries. For
example, in my neighbouring constituency of North Down, a company
called Lithium Go specialises in providing stable battery power
to the golf trolley industry. I believe there is scope for
Northern Ireland to contribute on a wider scale. What discussions
has the Minister had with the Department for the Economy to see
how we can advance the technology and the opportunity to
businesses in Northern Ireland? We have the skilled workforce, we
have the opportunities, we have the interest and I believe that
we can do our part in Northern Ireland.
While I understand that mineral planning policy is a devolved
matter, areas of potential geological prospectivity for critical
minerals in Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales must be
recognised by the UK Government centrally. In an answer to a
parliamentary question, the Minister stated that two areas of
geological prospectivity for lithium had been identified in
Scotland and no areas in Wales. When the SNP shadow Minister, the
hon. Member for Gordon (), speaks, he will no doubt
mention that. That shows that Scotland has a head start, in
conjunction with the opportunities in England on the mainland.
Northern Ireland was not mentioned, so could the Minister provide
clarity on what discussions he has held with his relevant
counterparts in Northern Ireland on their role in the supply of
lithium and other minerals?
We all in this House, in all political parties and on both sides
of the Chamber, have a commitment to making the world a better
place. That is a goal that all of us try to achieve, and
sustainability is part of that. Yet we must all ensure that these
are not unachievable goals, but that they have a solid foundation
and practicality. We must sort out how we can supply lithium
safely and in an environmentally friendly way. That has to be a
priority for us all.
I often say—and I say it with great honesty and truthfulness—that
I want this great United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern
Ireland to succeed, to prosper, to do well. I believe one of the
great advantages we have is being able to do that together. My
request to the Minister, and to others who will speak, is to
ensure that we can all gain. In Northern Ireland, we deserve the
same opportunity. We can contribute greatly to this debate and
what we are trying to achieve.
2.54pm
(Truro and Falmouth)
(Con)
It is a pleasure to follow the hon. Member for Strangford (). I thank my constituency neighbour, my hon. Friend
the Member for St Austell and Newquay (), for securing this really
important debate. As his successor as chair of the all-party
group for critical minerals, it has been my privilege to champion
this industry in Parliament in recent years. I am told that the
phrase “critical minerals” has been used more in Hansard in the
past couple of years than in the whole of Parliament's history.
That shows that critical minerals are firmly on the agenda and
that everybody is starting to talk about them.
My hon. Friend knows that every opportunity to discuss lithium
and other critical minerals is a chance to raise the profile of
this vital sector and outline its importance to our energy
security as a nation and a global economy. It should also give
our constituents in Cornwall a sense of pride. The sector is
absolutely essential, given that demand for critical minerals is
due to quadruple by 2040 to meet the requirements for clean
energy technologies on our way towards net zero.
As my hon. Friend outlined, mining has always been closely
interwoven with Cornish communities. It has been fantastic to
witness the revival of Cornwall's mining industries, which has
restored Cornwall to its rightful place at the heart of the UK's
critical minerals strategy. He spoke at length about how Cornish
Lithium and Imerys British Lithium are going from strength to
strength. I associate myself with his comments, and I thank the
companies for their endeavours.
In addition to lithium, Cornwall is also extracting tin. I had
yet another opportunity to visit Cornish Metals at South Crofty
in the constituency of my right hon. Friend the Member for
Camborne and Redruth (). I took great pleasure in
showing the then Minister for Industry and Economic Security—my
hon. Friend the Member for Wealden (Ms Ghani), who has now picked
up a brief in the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development
Office—around the site. We met the company directors, who took
her underground to update her on the progress that Cornish Metals
has been making to restore that historic mine.
Cornwall is home to one of the top three tin sites in the world,
and it is expected that South Crofty will be back online in 2026.
I want to highlight a couple of the challenges facing our new and
re-emerging mining companies that were raised when I visited
South Crofty. The first relates to planning. South Crofty is on
an existing site and, as my hon. Friend the Member for St Austell
and Newquay said, although we had local buy-in, the planning
process took about 12 years and cost more than £10 million; that
is now completed. Given that Cornwall is an area sympathetic to
mining infrastructure, surely we can simplify the process if we
mean what we say about the minerals being critical.
The second challenge is the processing. My hon. Friend has spoken
about lithium processing, but currently any tin extracted from
Cornwall will need to be exported to the far east to be
processed. In Europe, the energy costs are simply too high, and
we must use carbon to melt the metal. The sites in Belgium and
Poland are used only to recycle, so should we stand up our own
processing in the UK, perhaps in south Wales or Humberside, next
door to our existing steelworks?
Despite that, mining is not the dirty industry it once was. As
champions of the industry, we have a duty to remind communities
of the environmental benefits that a restoration of Cornwall's
mining industry will bring to our natural surroundings, our towns
and our villages. It is not simply about high-skilled jobs for
the future and opportunities for work. The Cornwall Lithium site
at United Downs is producing geothermal energy, which is ready to
power local houses and businesses. The water treatment plant at
South Crofty is providing resources for the reopening of the mine
that can also be used to clean the nearby Red River—no longer as
red as it was—and protect local wildlife. That is a great example
of the fact that when the Government give industry the breathing
space to start in an emerging sector, the benefits to the
economy, security and the environment are bountiful.
It is important that we place our discussions about the supply of
critical minerals in a broader international context. I have
worked closely with the Critical Minerals Association and its
partners to get world leaders in the industry, and
representatives of international bodies and Governments across
the word, in the same room to have conversations and build the
relationships that are needed now if we are ever to be in a
position to grow the supply chain at pace to meet the growing
global demand.
Last November, I hosted the first ever roundtable of producer
nations, right here in Parliament. We brought together Ministers
from Kyrgyzstan, Saudi Arabia, South Sudan, Nigeria and Armenia
for a discussion with Foreign Office Ministers about the future
of our respective critical mineral supply chains. The event
complemented the UK's Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative roundtable, which I had hosted earlier in the year,
where we discussed the corporate risk and the need to set out
international expectations for the industry early on, to ensure
transparency and ethical mining in the rush to meet demand.
I also attended another roundtable at the US ambassador's
residence. If I am totally honest, I was quite surprised to be
invited, because it included representatives from the US
Government as well as global industry CEOs. We were able to
brainstorm on the cross-governmental challenges that like-minded
nations face, in order to build resilience in the supply chain
and meet global demand, thereby ensuring not just security but
sustainability.
(Blackley and Broughton)
(Lab)
The hon. Lady has made two significant points in a coherent
speech. First, we will not be able to make use of natural
resources in this country while our energy costs remain so high,
and secondly, the planning regime that we operate in makes
getting permission for the extraction of any minerals very
difficult. Does she agree that deep in the Government, as the
hon. Member for St Austell and Newquay () said, there is still a belief
that we can rely on international trade to import critical
minerals, whereas in actual fact China is behaving malevolently
and trying to monopolise the trade?
The hon. Gentleman is not wrong, in that global events are
catching up with us. I think everybody in this Chamber knows that
Whitehall moves at a glacial pace at the best of times, and
current geopolitics has taught us that the Government need to be
more agile. I think they are getting better at that and at
getting Government Departments to work together. I mentioned that
the Minister's predecessor now has the equivalent brief in the
Foreign Office and will therefore take her understanding with
her. Government Departments are getting better at working
together, but the hon. Gentleman made an incredibly important
point.
Throughout all the events we have hosted this year I have been
reassured by the Government's determination and willingness to
pitch in. The critical minerals strategy grapples with many of
the industry's original concerns, yet I also think most of us see
it as an evolving document, as both our ambitions for the sector
and the realities on the ground shift. What is true is that the
strategy will ensure that the UK remains competitive as different
nations grow their supply chains at varying rates, and it will
also ensure that regions such as Cornwall, which have so much to
offer, get the sustainable investment and job opportunities that
we need.
Before I draw my speech to a close, I will discuss the local
impact of improving the supply of critical minerals to my
constituents in Truro and Falmouth, outlining the successes of
the activity by the Government and the all-party parliamentary
group on critical minerals on the international stage, as well as
the reassuring framework offered by the critical minerals
strategy. I will also use this opportunity to mention alternative
ways of boosting the supply of lithium, tin and other minerals
through recycling.
The world-renowned Camborne School of Mines is now based at the
University of Exeter in Penryn. It is highly respected around the
world and I have met many of its graduates during my time as
chair of the APPG. In February 2023, an additional £15 million
was invested into research on strengthening the resilience of our
critical minerals supply chain by recovering rare earth metals
from products that had already been used. This work has huge
potential. For example, it is estimated that by 2040 some 10% of
copper, nickel, lithium and cobalt could be generated by
recycling used batteries. When we are in a position of urgency,
it makes perfect sense for us to maximise the minerals we have in
products with limited lifespans, in order to alleviate the
pressure on our mining industries and shore up our national
security in the process.
Earlier this year, the Minister responsible for resources, my
hon. Friend the Member for Keighley (), announced that the
University of Exeter, where the Camborne School of Mines is now
based, would be a partner in the new United Nations-backed centre
that will propel the transition to a future circular economy. The
International Centre of Excellence on Sustainable Resource
Management in the Circular Economy is the first such centre in
the world. It will develop new approaches to the circular economy
in areas such as metals, construction and critical minerals. I
thank Ministers for taking the initiative on this front and
putting investment into research early on, and I pay tribute to
Professor Frances Wall at the Camborne School of Mines for
leading the work.
Across the board, we have had big wins for the critical minerals
industry in the UK, particularly in Cornwall. Our future security
and economic growth rely on getting the next phase of increasing
supply chain capability right for international demand, with
balance to benefit our mining communities. However, it is quite
easy for attention to shift to the next domestic policy interest
of the moment, which is why I will continue to use every possible
forum in this place to raise the topic. I am incredibly grateful
to my constituency neighbour, my hon. Friend the Member for St
Austell and Newquay, for giving me the opportunity to do so
today.
Sir (in the Chair)
We now come to the speeches from the Front-Bench spokespeople. I
call Mr .
3.05pm
(Gordon) (SNP)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairship this afternoon,
Sir Gary. I add my congratulations to the hon. Member for St
Austell and Newquay () on securing a debate on this
important topic.
Although the concentration on lithium is entirely understandable,
given the significance not just to Cornwall but to the broader
economy of having a secure supply, critical raw materials go much
wider. The minerals are economically important because they are
needed to make batteries and semiconductors, which are vital for
the transition to clean energy, as we have heard, but they are
also at the greatest risk of supply chain disruption. The UK has
18 metals and minerals on its CRM list, and another six minerals
are classed as having an elevated criticality because of where
they come from. As is sometimes said in relation to the economy,
if we cannot grow it, we have to mine it. That is very much where
we are.
I offer some assurances to the hon. Member for Strangford (), who felt that Northern Ireland was somewhat left
behind in this policy area. The British Geological Survey has
compiled a report on where many of the critical minerals can be
found, and there appear to be significant deposits of very many
spread across the counties of Fermanagh and Tyrone, so Northern
Ireland can potentially play a role in meeting the demand for
them.
Apart from Cornwall, about which we have heard, west Wales,
Cumbria and the highlands of Scotland, as well as my own patch of
Aberdeenshire, are also thought to be home to significant
deposits. I can certainly testify to the interest in the issue:
in September 2022, a helicopter that was seeking to detect
critical minerals in Aberdeenshire managed to hit a pylon and
black out 1,000 of my constituents' electricity supplies for some
time. That had some ramifications, but it brought it home to
people that something out there was worth looking for, even if we
hope that more care is taken in future.
Outside the UK, the 18 critical minerals are concentrated in
particular geographical areas. For example, Brazil produces 98%
of the global niobium reserve, the majority of cobalt comes from
the Democratic Republic of the Congo, and Russia has significant
deposits of palladium. For the vast majority of critical
minerals, many of the countries in which they are concentrated
are autocratic, many are non-aligned, which is a matter for them,
and with many we do not enjoy the best of diplomatic relations.
Ensuring continuity of supply is therefore in many respects as
much a geopolitical issue as a geological one.
The world in 2040 is expected to need four times as many critical
minerals as are being used today. The demand for lithium,
particularly, is expected to surge by about 90% over the next two
decades. Demand for nickel and cobalt is expected to rise by
between 60% and 70%, and demand for copper and rare earth metals
is expected to increase by 40%. To take one example that is most
closely associated with the increased demand for CRMs, electric
vehicles use 10 times more of those materials than conventional
cars. Reaching net zero transport emissions by 2050 would require
the sixfold increase of critical mineral extraction over the next
15 years.
It is estimated that stripping the earth's natural resources in
this way is causing about 60% of global heating impact, including
land-use change, 40% of air pollution impact, and more than 90%
of global water stress and land-related biodiversity loss. It is
important that we go about extraction, whether domestically or
internationally, with care. There are some important principles
to keep in mind. We cannot afford for our approach to achieving
domestic resilience and net zero to come at a similar or greater
environmental cost than that which we are hoping to forestall.
That is why we must ensure that the extraction of CRMs is done as
sustainably as possible, wherever they happen to be extracted.
That means transforming the extractive industries to minimise the
social and environmental impact, which has to be part of the
solution to moving towards net zero. A failure to do that will
simply lead to stranded assets, perpetuating existing
vulnerabilities and inequalities around the world. It will
jeopardise the fight against climate change and threaten human
wellbeing, ecosystems and economies for decades, if not
centuries.
Successive UK Governments have perhaps to a certain extent
sleepwalked to the position we are in now, which leaves the
economy vulnerable to the sensitivities in supply. That was
recognised in last December's report by the Foreign Affairs
Committee, which found that successive UK Governments had
“failed to recognise the importance of critical minerals”
in their strategies, and had
“failed to respond…to the aggressive capture of large parts”
of the global market over the last three decades—particularly by
China—which has allowed a single country to dominate the UK's
critical minerals supply, leaving us with the consequent
vulnerabilities in terms of economic resilience and security.
China is the dominant player in the market—we should not ignore
or be blind to that. Nor should we be blind to the fact that the
Chinese state has not been slow to use that dominance against
other states that it has found itself in dispute with.
What is to be done? Domestic CRM is largely unproven as yet. It
could in many cases be years away from happening, even with a
fair political wind and a benign planning approach. The USA and
others are acting in this space. The USA is beginning to re-shore
supply chains through the Inflation Reduction Act, and in 2020
the EU published its own action plan on critical raw materials,
which is influencing its policy responses.
As well as extraction we need to look at how we can create a
genuinely circular economy that can repurpose materials that have
already been extracted. For example, the Scottish Government want
to ban the sale and supply of single-use vapes in Scotland from
April 2025. A single-use vape contains plastic, copper, cobalt
and a lithium battery. The total amount of single-use vapes
purchased every year contains enough lithium to provide the
batteries for 5,000 electric vehicles. We should not allow the
fact that they are very small products to disguise the adverse
impact they can have not only on the environment after they are
disposed of, but in terms of how their ingredients could be put
to better use and secondary and tertiary use in future.
In conclusion, the UK has to urgently address dependency on China
for its critical minerals. It must make itself more resilient to
disruption in the CRM supply to avoid a situation in which the
Government find themselves exposed economically or in terms of
security. The UK needs to play catch-up with what our American
and European partners have done to minimise their own exposure.
We also need to work relentlessly to create circularity in our
economy to make sure that the critical materials that we have
already do not end up in landfill or not being used, so that they
can be repurposed to minimise exposure and preserve the planet's
resources. There is only one planet. We need to do all we can to
protect it and make the best use of its resources.
3.13pm
(Croydon Central) (Lab)
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Gary, and
a pleasure to follow all the contributors to what has been a
thoughtful debate. I am grateful to the hon. Member for St
Austell and Newquay () for securing the debate. I
completely understand why he wanted to do so, and think I agree
with everything he said in his speech. Although we have made some
small progress, I agree that there is a silo mentality and it is
disappointing that the Government are not as joined up as they
should be on these issues. I also agree with the hon. Gentleman's
points about the need for more focus on the midstream. I have
heard that several times from people I have engaged with while I
have been in this role.
The hon. Member for Strangford () highlighted the potential role, as we learned, of
Northern Ireland. When I was in Northern Ireland a couple of
weeks ago, I met representatives of the chamber of commerce and
visited businesses including Harland & Wolff, and their
ambitions were very high. It was reassuring and encouraging to
hear that everybody is pushing forward now that the Assembly is
back up and running; it feels as though real progress is being
made.
I listened with interest to the hon. Member for Truro and
Falmouth () about her role on the
all-party parliamentary group for critical minerals. I have met
the Critical Minerals Association and others and I understand
what she is saying. I agree that mining is not always the dirty
industry that it once was, but in some places, it is. Our role is
to try to make sure that it is not a dirty industry and that,
where we do it and where we supply and rely on others, it is
being done properly. I agree that the Government need to be more
agile in responding to some of the challenges that we face. The
role of the extractive industries and how that works is an
important part of the debate, as the hon. Member for Gordon
() said.
I will add to some of the key arguments that have been made. If
people are not familiar with the term “critical minerals”, it has
an air of mystery about it, but there is nothing clandestine
about the importance of critical minerals and how key they are to
our modern society. I welcome the Minister to his new role. If he
has not already read “Material World” by Ed Conway, I encourage
him to do so, because it brings to life how important critical
minerals are for us all.
The first thing that many of us do when we wake up in the morning
is check our phone, which is powered by a lithium battery. We
might spend the day working on a laptop; its chip is laced with
tin. In the coming years, we will get more and more of our
electricity from turbines that are powered as much by metals like
cobalt as by the wind that turns their blades. If the Minister
has not already been to the UK Battery Industrialisation Centre,
I encourage him to go, so he can see how important critical
minerals are in the production of batteries, which will be
important for electric vehicle manufacturing in this country.
As has been said, the move to net zero is key. The International
Energy Agency has predicted that demand for critical minerals
could more than double by 2030. There are different figures—the
hon. Member for Truro and Falmouth said that it would
quadruple—but we know that the need for critical minerals will
increase significantly. It is therefore vital that we secure the
supply of lithium and other critical minerals to this
country.
Labour is clear that the green transition is our biggest economic
opportunity. It is our chance to bring economic growth back to
this country—the driving mission of a future Labour
Government—along with hundreds of thousands of jobs everywhere,
from Cornwall to Carlisle. As the shadow Chancellor has set out,
we are living in an age of insecurity. The vulnerabilities
exposed by the pandemic, by rising geopolitical tensions, which
have been mentioned, and by the changing climate have made it
clear that a joined-up approach to the economy is vital for our
nation's security.
Many of the 18 minerals that the UK defines as “critical” are
concentrated in specific geographic areas, the majority of which,
as has been said, are not dependable allies of the UK. China is
the biggest producer of 12 of the 18 minerals. That makes it
clear that strategic, co-ordinated and effective steps to secure
our supply of those minerals are vital. Critical action is
needed, on which we believe that the Government have critically
underdelivered.
Other countries are racing ahead, but the Conservatives still
refuse on ideological grounds to have an industrial strategy,
which leaves our approach to critical minerals disjointed and
scattergun. Instead of showing decisive leadership, we risk
seeing the UK sidelined in the global race for the industries of
the future. The EU Critical Raw Materials Act has introduced
benchmarks for domestic capabilities along critical mineral
supply chains. The US Inflation Reduction Act, which has
accelerated the race for critical mineral production there, is a
powerful intervention that the Chancellor dismissed as a
“distortive …subsidy race”.
We welcomed the Government's critical minerals strategy when it
was finally published, but some parts of their approach were
frankly baffling. For example, why did they choose not to assess
the vulnerabilities of the UK's industrial supply chains while
drawing it up? Why did the strategy contain no specific targets
for priority sectors? Why was there no plan to expand midstream
capacity for processing and refining in the UK, including in the
critical minerals refresh published last year? As the Critical
Minerals Association said, without developing the UK midstream,
there is a risk that the UK Government will not be recognised as
integral to global critical mineral supply chains.
The strategy should have been a vital document, but as others
have mentioned, the Foreign Affairs Committee concluded in a
report that it is simply too broad to have real impact. That
failure is deeply concerning, and it means that crucial investors
in the critical minerals supply chain will look elsewhere. They
will look to Europe, to countries such as Germany who are
expected to have the largest battery manufacturing capacity on
the continent by 2030. In comparison, the UK still has just one
gigafactory that is actually operational.
The Government's ad hoc approach has failed; the Conservatives
have left Britain vulnerable, and Labour will take a new
approach. Where this Government have proved themselves
ideologically allergic to joined-up thinking, Labour knows that a
real industrial strategy is the only adequate response to our age
of insecurity. Building a resilient economy will be a core
principle of our approach, which is why our industrial strategy
provides for a new supply chains taskforce to analyse the
potential supply chain needs across critical sectors, to review
the vulnerability of critical supply chains to extreme risks and
to assess the potential requirements of responding to those
shocks.
That industrial strategy will work hand in glove with Labour's
green prosperity plan, built on the principle of using catalytic
public investment to secure investment from the private sector—a
principle that the hon. Member for St Austell and Newquay may be
able to attest to the power of. Labour will make strategic public
investments to develop and support critical supply chains here in
Britain. Our national wealth fund will invest £1.5 billion in new
gigafactories and aim to draw in three times as much from the
private sector. Boosting Britain's automotive industry at the one
end and the critical minerals supply chain at the other, the new
gigafactories will help to put Britain back on a competitive
international footing and to secure Britain's place in the
international supply of those key materials.
When it comes to critical minerals, it is vital to look way
beyond our borders, which is why a Labour Government would ensure
that our trade policy works in step with our domestic plans. That
is why we need to work with our friends and allies on secure and
resilient supply chains, aligning capacities in key sectors with
our wider security relationships. I was at a roundtable recently
with the Critical Minerals Association and many others, including
representatives from Australia and Canada, and we were talking
about how the Foreign Office works in terms of its relationships
and priorities. It is clear that the need for critical minerals
needs to be stamped on what is done by the Foreign Office, as
well as by other Departments. We need to make sure that we are
building relationships with our allies from whom we will need to
source materials in the future. We should also use our
international position to boost standards, which, when it comes
to critical minerals, have too often been sorely lacking.
Securing the supply of new critical minerals is crucial, but it
is also vital to consider how we make the most of the materials
that already surround us. I did not know that there is an
estimated average of 20 unused electronic items in every
household across the UK. We have to not make a mockery of
recycling, as our Prime Minister has, but see it in its rightful
place in helping to secure the circular economy, with buy-in from
devolved Administrations across the UK. That is a real priority
in moving towards a sustainable future.
Getting this right is vital, so I hope that the Minister can
answer a few questions before the end of the debate. What is the
Government's plan to support the development of midstream
critical mineral capacity in the UK? How do the Government plan
to support the move to a circular economy to reduce our demand
for new minerals? How is his Department working with the Foreign
Office to engage with our allies so that we can secure our
critical mineral supply and boost international standards? In the
Government's response to the task and finish group, they said
that they would consider new supportive proposals. Have the
Government done that yet? Securing our supply of lithium and
other critical minerals needs leadership—leadership that the
Government have so far failed to deliver. We risk letting the UK
fall behind in securing our supply of critical minerals. Labour
will put the UK back in the race.
3.24pm
The Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Business and Trade
()
It is a pleasure to serve under your chairmanship, Sir Gary. I
congratulate my hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay
() on securing this debate. He
is a long-standing advocate for his home county of Cornwall and
for the UK's minerals industry. He has spoken powerfully about
the importance of critical minerals to our economy and the role
that Imerys, British Lithium and Cornish Lithium play in his
community. He told us that he established the all-party
parliamentary group for critical minerals. He is too modest to
say this, but he is the driving force behind all those Hansard
mentions of critical minerals, and I congratulate him on that. He
speaks with great authority on the subject and I am grateful to
him for giving us the opportunity to discuss it today.
I thank the hon. Member for Strangford (), my hon. Friend the Member for Truro and Falmouth
() and the hon. Member for
Gordon () for their contributions
to this debate, and I thank the Opposition spokesperson, the hon.
Member for Croydon Central (), for her kind words of welcome
as I take up this post. I also wish to recognise the work of my
predecessor in this role, my hon. Friend the Member for Wealden
(Ms Ghani). As we have heard, she worked extensively on this
issue, and I know that she will continue to support it in her new
role in the Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office.
My predecessor recently visited three key mining projects in
Cornwall, including two lithium mines in the constituency of my
hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay. Since I
started this role four weeks ago, I have spoken to several UK
mining companies, including Cornish Lithium and Johnson Matthey,
with Pensana to come. I look forward to seeing for myself more
growth-spurring, job-creating projects in the future, and I look
forward to visiting Cornwall as soon as I can.
As my hon. Friend rightly notes, we are moving to a world powered
by critical minerals. As we heard, we need lithium, cobalt,
nickel and graphite to make batteries for electric cars; silicon
and tin for our electronics; and rare earth elements for electric
cars and wind turbines. These critical minerals are characterised
by having the highest levels of economic importance and the
highest levels of supply risk. We know that they will become even
more important over time as we seek to bolster our energy
security and domestic industrial resilience, while pursuing
cleaner, green forms of energy production. As my hon. Friend the
Member for Truro and Falmouth indicated, the world in 2040 is
expected to need four times as many critical minerals for clean
energy technologies as it did in 2020. However, we know that
critical mineral supply chains are complex and vulnerable to
disruption.
Traditionally, production is highly concentrated in certain
countries. For example, China refines close to three quarters of
the world's lithium carbonate for batteries and around 90% of the
world's rare earth metals. State intervention in these markets is
high. Supply chains are often fraught with environmental, social
and governance issues and the market does not fully differentiate
products on their ESG credentials.
All these issues present challenges to the UK's security of
supply, because UK industries and jobs, our energy infrastructure
and our defence capabilities all rely on minerals that are
vulnerable to market shocks, geopolitical events and logistical
disruptions, at a time when global demand for these minerals is
rising faster than ever. The Government's view is that it is
imperative for us to make our supply chains more resilient and
more diverse. We need to support British industry now and in the
future. That work is inextricably linked to both our energy
security and our national security. For all these reasons, this
Government have acted decisively to ensure that we have resilient
domestic supply chains that give our businesses the long-term
certainty they need.
As my hon. Friend said today, back in July 2022, we published our
first ever critical minerals strategy, setting out our approach
to improving the resilience of critical mineral supply chains.
Above anything, it is a strategy that recognises that critical
minerals are a multifaceted issue. It provides an overarching
framework for accelerating our domestic capabilities, promotes
closer collaboration with international partners and seeks to
enhance international markets.
We always said that we would need to monitor global events and
recalibrate our approach as necessary. That is one of the reasons
we published the critical minerals refresh in March last year,
reflecting the changing global landscape, highlighting progress
to date and setting out our approach to delivering the strategy
for UK businesses. Working closely with industry, we are already
making good progress with the strategy, which I will say more
about later, but we recognise that there is more to do.
I reassure my hon. Friend and all Members that we take a
comprehensive and strategic cross-Government approach to critical
minerals. While the Department for Business and Trade leads on
critical minerals strategy, the delivery and evolution of the
strategy and many of the policy levers lie outside my Department,
and therefore we co-operate with Departments across Whitehall. I
also reassure him that officials from my Department engage
closely and regularly with officials in the Department for Energy
Security and Net Zero where necessary.
It is also important to note that we support UK industries,
especially those that depend on a steady flow of critical
minerals, to seek resilience and diversity in their own supply
chains. That is why last year we launched the independent task
and finish group on industry resilience for critical minerals—a
first-of-its-kind initiative for industry-Government engagement
on critical minerals supply risks. The task and finish group has
raised the importance of critical minerals with key industrial
sectors, helping them to manage the risks in their supply chains.
It has also given us insights about the UK's dependencies and
vulnerabilities, and published a report containing a series of
recommendations on how to best guide the delivery of our
strategy. The Government warmly welcome the group's report and
our full response to those recommendations was published last
month. I encourage Members to read that report if they have not
already.
As my hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay will be
aware, the Government launched the Critical Minerals Intelligence
Centre in 2022, in partnership with the British Geological
Survey, to monitor risks in supply chains and assess just how
critical different minerals will be over time. Their first
assessment identified 18 critical minerals, including lithium,
rare earths, tungsten and tin, and an update is due by the end of
this year.
These are vital efforts but we know that our work is not yet
done. That is why we continue to work with industries across the
board to support resilience and diversification in their supply
chains. We re-emphasised that commitment in our critical imports
and supply chains strategy, published by my Department at the
beginning of this year. As my hon. Friend mentioned, the Critical
Imports Council is a key part of that work. I was proud to chair
its inaugural meeting earlier this month and I welcome that the
Critical Minerals Association and the Institute of Materials,
Minerals and Mining are key parts of it. I look forward to
working with them, as I know my hon. Friend does.
Here at home, we are supporting UK critical minerals producers to
take advantage of the opportunities right along the value chain,
including in Cornwall. While we will always rely on international
supply chains, we have to maximise what the UK can produce
domestically; my hon. Friend made the case for that powerfully.
We need to make sure this is done where it is viable for
businesses, and where it works for communities and our natural
environment, as my hon. Friend the Member for Truro and Falmouth
rightly mentioned. I agree with her that the UK is perfectly
placed to lead on midstream processing, including refining and
materials manufacturing, building on its globally competitive
chemicals and metals sector.
My hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay is
absolutely right that we have the capabilities to mine or refine
enough lithium in the UK to satisfy more than our demands by
2030, but that is not true of all critical minerals. We have more
than 50 projects at various stages of development to mine,
process and recycle critical minerals domestically, and we want
every one of those to be set up for success. That is why, to
accelerate the growth of our domestic capabilities, the
Government are investing big in critical minerals programmes. Our
automated transformation fund, for example, is supporting
projects in automotive supply chains, such as British Lithium,
Green Lithium and Pensana. Meanwhile, as my hon. Friend will
know, the UK Infrastructure Bank has invested over £24 million in
Cornish Lithium. I was pleased to meet both the chief executive
and the chief financial officer of that company in my second week
in this role, which I hope underlines the importance of that
company and his county to me and the strategy. They are part of a
growing ecosystem, which includes gigafactory footprints that are
getting bigger by the week.
At the same time, the Government are taking decisive steps to
reduce the price of energy, as my hon. Friend the Member for
Truro and Falmouth mentioned, to ensure competitiveness with
other major economies across Europe, including through the
British industry supercharger, which she will know comprises a
series of targeted measures to bring energy costs for key
industries into line with our major competitors.
As my hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay knows,
the UK is also a pioneer in recovering critical minerals from
waste, and we are ensuring that we stay ahead of the pack through
Innovate UK's circular critical materials supply chains programme
to build and develop resilient supply chains. We are also
exploring regulatory mechanisms to promote battery,
waste-electricals and equipment recycling, which is an
opportunity for this country.
The Government have a clear vision for the role the UK can play
in critical minerals supply chains and we are throwing our full
support behind business to harness and grow our competitive
advantage, but we know that Britain cannot go it alone on
critical minerals. International collaboration is key to building
more resilient, diversified and responsible supply chains both
here and around the world. The UK therefore has a role to play as
an international deal maker, leveraging our extensive
multilateral engagement and our strong relationships with
mineral-rich producer countries and consumer markets.
In my contribution, I asked what could be done to increase
technological advances in Northern Ireland, so that we can be a
part of the great progress as we move forward. The hon. Member
for Gordon (), the spokesperson for the
SNP, referred to some lithium deposits in Fermanagh and Tyrone,
so there are possibilities—although that was not originally
known, so I am very interested to find out about that. Will the
Minister have discussions with the Department of Enterprise,
Trade and Investment in Northern Ireland to ensure that we can be
part of this great vision for the future of the United
Kingdom?
I thank the hon. Gentleman for his intervention. I will come
shortly to the possibilities for Northern Ireland, and I will
certainly cover the point that he makes. As ever, he is a great
champion for Strangford and for Northern Ireland's place in the
United Kingdom, and I very much welcome his contribution to this
debate on the topic of how we can co-operate, both among the home
nations of the United Kingdom and with our international
partners.
I want to reassure the hon. Gentleman that we are making real
progress when it comes to co-operation with our international
partners. For example, we have agreed bilateral partnerships on
critical minerals with Australia, Canada, South Africa, Saudi
Arabia, Kazakhstan, Zambia and Japan, with more to follow. The UK
has also been represented at major multilateral forums, including
the Minerals Security Partnership, which I attended in my second
week in this role, and we are involved in the International
Energy Agency, the G7 and other such forums. All this work means
that we are collaborating closely with our partners to improve
the resilience and security of the critical minerals supply
chain.
My hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay asked about
the EU dimension, and I want to reassure him that the opinion on
EU regulation is owned by the Health and Safety Executive, which
is part of the Department for Work and Pensions. I will be very
happy, if he would like me to, to assist him in following up with
the HSE and the DWP to find answers to his queries, while
respecting the scientific independence of those
organisations.
That brings me to the question of Northern Ireland. I want to let
the hon. Member for Strangford know that I will be visiting
Northern Ireland before the summer recess—hopefully in the coming
weeks—and I am looking forward to meeting my counterparts and
exploring the opportunities for the UK Government to support
businesses in Northern Ireland. I will certainly make lithium and
minerals part of the agenda, and I look forward to any support he
can give me in making sure that we cover those topics. Northern
Ireland is a crucial part of the United Kingdom, its economy is
thriving, and I want to ensure that we seize any opportunities we
find there. I also say to the hon. Member for Gordon that, when I
am next in Scotland, I will do the same there. I thank him for
raising the possibilities north of the border.
A core element of our international engagement, beyond the
multilateral partnerships I have mentioned, is helping
like-minded resource-rich countries to develop critical minerals
resources in a market-led way that aligns with our shared
sustainability, transparency, human rights and environmental
values—I am glad that they were mentioned in the debate. That is
how the Government are ensuring that the UK is leading the way on
critical minerals, driving up industry resilience, ramping up
domestic production, and fostering closer international
collaboration on the world stage.
I thank my hon. Friend the Member for St Austell and Newquay for
securing the debate. I am grateful for the work that he and other
hon. Members across the House do in supporting us in the mission
to ensure that our critical minerals supply chains are strong,
sustainable and resilient now and for many years to come.
Sir (in the Chair)
I call to have the final say.
3.39pm
Thank you, Sir Gary, and I thank all hon. Members who have
participated in the debate. I think we are all pretty unanimous
on the importance of this subject to the UK and our future. I
understand that for some people it is not the most interesting
subject in the world, but it is so important and I intend to keep
raising it.
I acknowledge much of what the Minister said. I am delighted to
see him in his place and to hear the commitments he made. I will
take him up on his offer to work with the DWP to get an answer
from the HSE on the matter I raised, and I am grateful to him for
that.
It is clear that we will always need to rely on global supply
chains to some extent for some of our critical minerals, but I
think we are all agreed that we need to make the most of our
domestic supply as much as we possibly can, for all the reasons
that we have covered in the debate. That is why, in Cornwall, we
are genuinely excited about the opportunity for lithium
extraction and determined to work to make the absolute most of
it, for the benefit of both the Cornish economy and the UK as a
whole. I am delighted that the Minister has offered to come and
visit, and I look forward to welcoming him so that he can see for
himself all that is going on in Cornwall to revive our mining
history and point the way to a prosperous future in that
regard.
I will conclude by thanking again all the Members who
participated in the debate. I hope that we have laid down some
markers that we will continue to raise and work on.
Question put and agreed to.
Resolved,
That this House has considered the supply of lithium and other
critical minerals.
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