Battery Minerals Mining
Exploring the Commercialization & Processing of Critical Battery Minerals
12/10/2024 - December 11, 2024 ALL TIMES PST
As global demand for critical minerals needed for decarbonization efforts grows, commercialization of newly discovered deposits and processing efficiency moves into the spotlight. With much of the world's supply of these minerals in overseas territory and both supply chains and national security concerns at the forefront, this new event will bring together mine operators, mineral processors, battery manufacturers and other key stakeholders to examine challenges, innovation and opportunities.

Tuesday, December 10

Registration and Morning Coffee

BATTERY MINERALS MINING OVERVIEW

Organizer's Remarks

Sarah Stockwell, PhD, Conference Producer, Cambridge EnerTech , Conference Producer , Cambridge EnerTech

Chairperson's Remarks

Parvin Adeli, PhD, Manager, Batteries, Nickel Institute , Mgr Batteries , Market Dev , Nickel Institute

Mine Planning and the Importance of Quantifying Upstream Environmental Impacts for Battery End Users.

Photo of Sahin Alacacayir, Research Tech Lead, R&D, Minviro Ltd , Research Tech Lead , R&D , Minviro Ltd
Sahin Alacacayir, Research Tech Lead, R&D, Minviro Ltd , Research Tech Lead , R&D , Minviro Ltd

This presentation will explore the critical role of mine planning in shaping environmental outcomes that affect miners, battery manufacturers, and end users. The discussion will focus on the importance of Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) in quantifying environmental impacts across the value chain. Additionally, it will cover best practices for interpreting these impacts and effectively communicating them to stakeholders across the battery supply chain.

The "Nevada Lithium Batteries and Other EV Materials Loop" Regional Technology and Innovation Hub: Building a Globally Competitive Domestic Supply Chain from Extraction, to Processing, to Advanced Manufacturing, to Recycling

Photo of Fred Steinmann, DPPD, Director, University Center for Economic Development, College of Business, University of Nevada , Director, University Center for Economic Development , The College of Business , University of Nevada, Reno
Fred Steinmann, DPPD, Director, University Center for Economic Development, College of Business, University of Nevada , Director, University Center for Economic Development , The College of Business , University of Nevada, Reno

A discussion on how the "Nevada Tech Hub" is seeking to create a self-contained supply chain across Nevada's emerging lithium batteries, critical elements, and other EV materials industry sector, from extraction to processing to advanced manufacturing to recycling, through targeted business creation and expansion efforts and through strategic collaborations to meet the nation's national security, climate mitigation, and economic diversification needs and goals.

ESG in Battery Supply Chains: When Aspiration Conflicts with Reality

Photo of Adele Rouleau, Senior Environmental Consultant, Geosyntec Consultants , Sr Environmental Consultant , Geosyntec Consultants
Adele Rouleau, Senior Environmental Consultant, Geosyntec Consultants , Sr Environmental Consultant , Geosyntec Consultants

The number of ESG-related regulations impacting global battery supply chains has increased substantially over the past decade. With growing scrutiny from mine to metal, companies are now increasingly exposed to the risks of regulatory non-compliance, which can take several forms: from penalties associated with incorrect reporting, to activist NGOs holding corporations to account and downstream stakeholders being held responsible for incidents at the upstream level.

Panel Moderator:

PANEL DISCUSSION:
Session Wrap-Up

Parvin Adeli, PhD, Manager, Batteries, Nickel Institute , Mgr Batteries , Market Dev , Nickel Institute

Panelists:

Adele Rouleau, Senior Environmental Consultant, Geosyntec Consultants , Sr Environmental Consultant , Geosyntec Consultants

Fred Steinmann, DPPD, Director, University Center for Economic Development, College of Business, University of Nevada , Director, University Center for Economic Development , The College of Business , University of Nevada, Reno

Sahin Alacacayir, Research Tech Lead, R&D, Minviro Ltd , Research Tech Lead , R&D , Minviro Ltd

Grand Opening Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Sponsorship Opportunity Available)

Mining and the Lithium Supply Chain in Nevada

Photo of Caleb Cage, President, Arc Dome Strategies , President , Arc Dome Strategies
Caleb Cage, President, Arc Dome Strategies , President , Arc Dome Strategies

Nevada is a leader in the global lithium supply chain. Mining is a critical part of Nevada's place in this supply chain, and our industry has benefited from the state's long history in exploration and mining projects. This talk will cover commercialization, local supply of raw materials, and collaboration facilitated by the Nevada Battery Coalition that is driving development and cooperation.

Technology Development Roadmaps for Battery Minerals Processing

Photo of Aki Fujita, Principal, Arthur D. Little , Principal , ARTHUR D LITTLE
Aki Fujita, Principal, Arthur D. Little , Principal , ARTHUR D LITTLE

​Establishing a battery supply chain in North America will require the development of many technologies, including lithium extraction, nickel sulfate refining, and pCAM refining. In particular, "battery grade" often requires a high level of quality and is frequently a barrier to mass production. This presentation will discuss approaches and solutions for achieving this goal.

Roaming Networking Lunch in the Exhibit Hall

Dessert Break

LITHIUM MINING AND PROCESSING

Chairperson's Remarks

David Dreisinger, PhD, Professor, Materials Engineering, University of British Columbia , Prof , Materials Engineering , University of British Columbia

The Promise and Challenges of Recovering Critical Minerals from Salton Sea Geothermal Brines

Photo of Michael McKibben, PhD, Research Professor, Earth & Planetary Sciences, University of California Riverside , Research Professor , Earth & Planetary Sciences , Univ of California Riverside
Michael McKibben, PhD, Research Professor, Earth & Planetary Sciences, University of California Riverside , Research Professor , Earth & Planetary Sciences , Univ of California Riverside

Salton Sea geothermal geothermal brines are capable of producing at a minimum the following metals at 90% recovery efficiency:

Metal    ppm      Rate 

Mn        1500      162,000 tpy 

Li            198        21,384 tpy 

Zn          500        54,000 tpy 

Challenges to producing these geothermal metals include: finding extraction media (substrates and adsorbents) that can withstand the high salinities, temperatures, and corrosive pH values; keeping the flashed brine hot and thus free of Si-Fe precipitates that can clog extraction media and injection wells; scaling-up direct lithium extraction technologies to extremely high brine flow rates; and reducing water consumption in the drought-stricken Colorado River basin.

Lithium Valley: Sustainable Lithium Recovery from Geothermal Brine

Photo of Jesus Eduardo Escobar , Supervisor , Imperial County
Jesus Eduardo Escobar , Supervisor , Imperial County
Photo of Ryan E. Kelley, Supervisor, Imperial County , Supervisor , Imperial County
Ryan E. Kelley, Supervisor, Imperial County , Supervisor , Imperial County

Lithium Valley” located in Imperial County, California, is projected to be the next “White Gold Rush” due to its abundance (3,400kilotons) of lithium in the geothermal brine in the region. The County is leading a transformational development of a 50k acre+ area to establish a one-of-a-kind vertically integrated, energy, lithium, and manufacturing ecosystem. Discover the innovative policies, workforce pipelines, and incentives that make Lithium Valley the ideal place to develop!

Refreshment Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Sponsorship Opportunity Available)

Driving Sustainable Mobility: The Crucial Role of Innovation in Lithium Upstream

Photo of Stefan Debruyne, Director of External Affairs, SQM International , Director of External Affairs , SQM Lithium
Stefan Debruyne, Director of External Affairs, SQM International , Director of External Affairs , SQM Lithium

Lithium is an essential element in the global energy transition. It's critically important to stakeholders that it is mined in a sustainable and equitable way. The presentation will look at the global lithium market and update SQM's progress on its sustainable development plan. It will highlight the crucial role innovation plays in reducing footprint and driving expansions to meet future demand in a responsible way.

Electrochemical Refining of Raw Lithium into Lithium Hydroxide or Lithium Carbonate

Photo of David St. Angelo, MS, CTO, Operations and Technology Development, Mangrove Lithium , Chief Technology Officer , Operations and Technology Development , Mangrove Lithium
David St. Angelo, MS, CTO, Operations and Technology Development, Mangrove Lithium , Chief Technology Officer , Operations and Technology Development , Mangrove Lithium

Electrochemical refining of raw lithium is a flexible and scalable approach to produce high-purity, battery-grade lithium hydroxide or lithium carbonate. Suitable feedstocks include brines, hard rocks, clays, DLE, and battery recycling. Modular electrochemical conversion technology can co-locate near the point of extraction, battery recycling, or battery manufacturing, removing supply risks and reliance on foreign supplies. Commercial demonstration plant performance results will be presented.

Decarbonization & circular economy: industry trends and considerations around LFP versus NCM battery recycling process development

Photo of David Anonychuk, Global Vice President, Metallurgy & Consulting, SGS , Global VP Metallurgy & Consulting , Natural Resources , SGS
David Anonychuk, Global Vice President, Metallurgy & Consulting, SGS , Global VP Metallurgy & Consulting , Natural Resources , SGS

Provide commentary on how major mining companies are planning their decarbonization strategies over the coming decade. Discuss considerations for battery recycling process development comparing increasing demand for LFP versus NCM battery chemistries.

Panel Moderator:

PANEL DISCUSSION:
Session Wrap-Up

David Dreisinger, PhD, Professor, Materials Engineering, University of British Columbia , Prof , Materials Engineering , University of British Columbia

Panelists:

Stefan Debruyne, Director of External Affairs, SQM International , Director of External Affairs , SQM Lithium

David St. Angelo, MS, CTO, Operations and Technology Development, Mangrove Lithium , Chief Technology Officer , Operations and Technology Development , Mangrove Lithium

David Anonychuk, Global Vice President, Metallurgy & Consulting, SGS , Global VP Metallurgy & Consulting , Natural Resources , SGS

NICKEL, COBALT, COPPER — MINING AND PROCESSING

Chairperson's Remarks

Stefan Debruyne, Director of External Affairs, SQM International , Director of External Affairs , SQM Lithium

Sustainable Deep-Sea Harvesting for Critical Battery Minerals Leveraging Battery-Powered Robots

Photo of Oliver Gunasekara, Co-Founder & CEO, Impossible Metals , Co-Founder & CEO , Impossible Metals Inc.
Oliver Gunasekara, Co-Founder & CEO, Impossible Metals , Co-Founder & CEO , Impossible Metals Inc.

To achieve net zero emission goals there is a growing need for large quantities of critical metals like nickel, cobalt, copper, and manganese. Impossible Metals has invented new technology which preserves and protects the marine habitat, while also reducing the cost of extraction.

Battery Metals and Biomining—Building a Sustainable Value Chain for Strategic Decarbonization Ecosystem

Photo of Homayoun Fathollahzadeh, PhD, Founder & CEO, Hominity , Founder & CEO , Hominity
Homayoun Fathollahzadeh, PhD, Founder & CEO, Hominity , Founder & CEO , Hominity

Addressing the bottlenecks of deploying sustainable processing in the mining and battery metals supply chain at the necessary speed and scale is rapidly becoming more urgent for industry, government, and financial and/or non-financial stakeholders. This presentation will discuss biotech and biomining potential in extraction and processing of battery metals where lower environmental, waste, and carbon footprints offer a major economic and environmental value with a positive social license to operate.

Close of Track

Networking Reception in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing

Close of Day

Wednesday, December 11

Breakout Discussions

Registration and Morning Coffee

NICKEL, COBALT, COPPER — MINING AND PROCESSING

Chairperson's Remarks

Stefan Debruyne, Director of External Affairs, SQM International , Director of External Affairs , SQM Lithium

Meeting the Demand for Sustainable, Responsible Cobalt

Photo of Tom Fairlie, Senior Sustainability Manager, Cobalt Institute , Senior Sustainability Manager , Cobalt Institute
Tom Fairlie, Senior Sustainability Manager, Cobalt Institute , Senior Sustainability Manager , Cobalt Institute

Cobalt is crucial for the energy transition, with demand rising mainly due to its use in electric vehicle (EV) batteries. As automotive companies demand materials with low environmental impacts, it’s essential for cobalt value chains to meet these expectations. This presentation will explore the challenges and opportunities in creating a sustainable cobalt supply chain and highlight the materials developed by the Cobalt Institute to support a low-impact cobalt value chain.

The Atlas Materials Process for Low Carbon Nickel and Cobalt Recovery from Imported Nickel Ores for Battery Chemical Manufacture

Photo of David Dreisinger, PhD, Professor, Materials Engineering, University of British Columbia , Prof , Materials Engineering , University of British Columbia
David Dreisinger, PhD, Professor, Materials Engineering, University of British Columbia , Prof , Materials Engineering , University of British Columbia

Nickel saprolite ores typically contain 1.5-2% Ni with <0.1% Co and are processed using pyrometallurgical techniques. The existing processes are energy-intensive and produce large amounts of slag and carbon dioxide emissions. The Atlas Materials Process extracts nickel, cobalt, magnesium, and other elements to produce a nickel/cobalt-containing mixed hydroxide precipitate for battery chemical manufacture, a silica residue for cement making and a variety of magnesium product streams.

Electrifying the Future: Nickel's Role in Advancing Battery Technology and Markets

Photo of Parvin Adeli, PhD, Manager, Batteries, Nickel Institute , Mgr Batteries , Market Dev , Nickel Institute
Parvin Adeli, PhD, Manager, Batteries, Nickel Institute , Mgr Batteries , Market Dev , Nickel Institute

With the surge of electric vehicles (EVs), high capacity, high energy density materials are essential to fulfill long-distance travel. Ni-rich cathodes are dominant owing to their high energy density and good rate capability. Batteries are the fastest growing market for nickel, and the Nickel Institute (NI) is quite active in this space. This presentation provides an overview of the NI Battery Program followed by the current global EV market and the share of nickel-based battery chemistries. Furthermore, a discussion on the patent landscape and the latest technology developments is included.

Coffee Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Sponsorship Opportunity Available)

PLENARY KEYNOTE

Chairperson's Remarks

Craig Wohlers, General Manager, Cambridge EnerTech , GM , Cambridge EnerTech

How GM Is Driving Battery Development and Enabling an All-EV Future

Photo of Kurt Kelty, Vice President, Battery, Propulsion, and Sustainability, General Motors , Vice President, Battery Cell & Pack , General Motors
Kurt Kelty, Vice President, Battery, Propulsion, and Sustainability, General Motors , Vice President, Battery Cell & Pack , General Motors

GM has established a foundation to accelerate the investment in and development of battery technology with a robust supply chain to support its growth over the next decade. In this talk, Kurt will discuss GM’s strategies for investing in new technologies and how its in-house capabilities enhance those efforts, with an overview and rationale behind key investments made to date. He will also provide insights on the company’s approach and significant milestones moving forward.

Steps to Increase EV Sales with V2G Enabled Battery Packs

Photo of Anil Paryani, Executive Engineering Director, Advanced EV Program, Ford , Executive Engineering Director , Advanced EV Program , Ford
Anil Paryani, Executive Engineering Director, Advanced EV Program, Ford , Executive Engineering Director , Advanced EV Program , Ford

Electricity prices are rising faster than gasoline. Simultaneously, clean solar energy is becoming available but remains underutilized. EV sales growth is flat. Why not charge EVs with excessive solar and then support the grid in times of challenge? Government policy and battery cycle life hinder the rollout of existing vehicle-to-grid (V2G) technology. This paper explores necessary electricity price changes and battery cycle life requirements needed to increase EV sales growth.

How Redwood Materials Is Building a Sustainable Battery Supply Chain

Photo of Colin Campbell, CTO, Redwood Materials , Chief Technology Officer , Redwood Materials
Colin Campbell, CTO, Redwood Materials , Chief Technology Officer , Redwood Materials

Redwood Materials is building a domestic supply chain for battery materials that reduces the environmental impact, costs, and supply chain risks of lithium-ion batteries. With the rise of electric vehicles and clean energy technologies comes both a challenge and opportunity to recover these materials, which can be nearly infinitely reused, to sustainably build tomorrow’s lithium-ion batteries. In his talk, Colin will discuss Redwood’s technology and commercial strategy, highlighting the company’s Nevada campus which today is recycling the equivalent of 250,000 EVs worth of material a year and manufacturing cathode active material in the U.S. for the first time.

Panel Moderator:

MODERATED Q&A:
Session Wrap-Up

Craig Wohlers, General Manager, Cambridge EnerTech , GM , Cambridge EnerTech

Panelists:

Kurt Kelty, Vice President, Battery, Propulsion, and Sustainability, General Motors , Vice President, Battery Cell & Pack , General Motors

Anil Paryani, Executive Engineering Director, Advanced EV Program, Ford , Executive Engineering Director , Advanced EV Program , Ford

Colin Campbell, CTO, Redwood Materials , Chief Technology Officer , Redwood Materials

Roaming Networking Lunch in the Exhibit Hall

Dessert Break in the Exhibit Hall with Poster Viewing (Sponsorship Opportunity Available)

Close of Conference


For more details on the conference, please contact:

Sarah Stockwell, PhD

Conference Producer

Cambridge EnerTech

Phone: (+1) 781-247-1816

Email: sstockwell@cambridgeenertech.com

 

For sponsorship information, please contact:

 

Companies A-Q

Sherry Johnson

Senior Business Development Manager

Cambridge EnerTech

Phone: (+1) 781-972-1359

Email: sjohnson@cambridgeenertech.com

 

Companies R-Z

Rod Eymael

Senior Business Development Manager

Cambridge EnerTech

Phone: (+1) 781-247-6286

Email: sjohnson@cambridgeenertech.com


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