The following editorial originally appeared in the Las Vegas Review-Journal:
Nevada is home to the largest known lithium deposit in the United States and one of the largest in the world. Radical greens would prefer the mineral remains buried in the Nevada outback. Thankfully, more rational voices are on the verge of prevailing.
This month, Ioneer Limited signed a deal with Esmeralda County to provide up to $17 million for various public services and infrastructure development in the remote, sparsely populated jurisdiction in west-central Nevada near the California border. The company expects to begin construction this year on a mining project to tap the extensive lithium deposits near Rhyolite Ridge, with production slated to begin in 2028.
Geologists estimate that the area contains 13.7 million metric tons of the mineral, which is essential to producing rechargeable batteries used in electric vehicles and electronic goods. Ioneer expects the mine to produce annually the equivalent of 25 percent of the global demand for lithium in 2021.
Not surprisingly, the project has for years met with resistance from green groups and tribal interests. Rather than welcome the production of a mineral vital to ease any transition from fossil fuels, activists have tried to scuttle the mine. While singing the doomsday gospel of global warming, they simultaneously seek to block access to the very materials necessary for a clean energy future.