Ghana’s sovereign wealth fund will invest almost $33 million in a lithium mine in the country. The investment includes taking a minority stake in its developer Atlantic Lithium.
Details
Ghana’s Minerals Income Investment Fund (MIIF) will buy a 6% stake in Atlantic Lithium’s projects in the country, including Ewoyaa, which is set to be the West African country’s first lithium producing mine, for $27.9 million.
MIIF will also buy a 3.05% stake in Atlantic Lithium for $5 million, it said. The deal gives it the option to bid for the Ewoyaa project’s available supply contract of the lithium produced, through a competitive process.
Why This Matters
In 2021, Piedmont Lithium PLL.O took a 9% stake in Atlantic Lithium to secure spodumene, or high-purity lithium ore, for which it has a supply contract with electric vehicle maker Tesla.
The investment is another example of a surge in interest in companies producing the key electric vehicle battery metal amid the clean energy transition.
What They’re Saying
“There is a competitive process (for the offtake) which MIIF will also participate in, but on a commercial level,” said Atlantic Lithium chairman Neil Herbert.
“There is an open field of chemical converters, OEMs, and major trading groups,” he said.
Source: Reuters
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