In Bolivia's western highlands, at an altitude of some 3,600 metres, lie the largest identified reserves of lithium in the world. According to the latest estimates by the United States Geological Survey (USGS), beneath the 10,000 square kilometres of what are the world's most extensive salt flats, the Salar de Uyuni, there are some 6 to 9 million tonnes of lithium (Roskill 2008 nach Angerer, Marscheider-Weidemann, Wendl et al. 2009, Jaskula 2010a). Exploitation of those reserves has not yet begun, though the Bolivian government has constructed a small 6 million US Dollar pilot plant on the edge of the Salar de Uyuni, and has some ambitious plans.
Waste | Resources, Soil | Land
Sustainable Prevention of Resource Conflicts
Risky Raw Materials for the Future? Case study and scenarios: Lithium in Bolivia
(Report 3.3)Series
Texte | 30/2011
Number of pages
53
Year of publication
Author(s)
Moira Feil, Lukas Rüttinger
Language
English
Other languages
Project No. (FKZ)
3708 19 102
Publisher
Umweltbundesamt
File size
3467 KB
Price
0,00 €
Print version
not available
rated as helpful
90