Mexico, which nationalized lithium resources in April, plans to start producing lithium batteries in late 2023 as it has secured foreign investment and the backing of the United States, its leading trading partner.
“We have already prepared for 2023 investments from companies from South Korea, China, and a program agreed with the U.S. to start producing batteries in Mexico, we hope in the third or fourth quarter,” foreign minister Marcelo Ebrard said, according to local paper La Jornada.
President Andrés Manuel López Obrador announced last month a US$2.5-billion plan to turn parts of the border region with the U.S. into a clean energy hub, home to solar and wind plants as well as electric vehicle factories.
Mexico plans to build five large solar plants, recondition car factories to make electric vehicles and produce batteries and semiconductors in Sonora.
The northern state, which shares nearly 600 km of border with the U.S., aims to also host mining projects developed with American and Canadian investors.
The country does not yet have commercial lithium production, but it has contracts with a dozen foreign companies to explore potential deposits.
A recent report by Mexico’s finance ministry pegs the value of Sonora lithium reserves at US$600 billion.
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