Following recent reports that newly accessed geothermal power resources in California could also provide access to lithium as a valuable by-product, a pilot facility is now in development.

Resource developer Controlled Thermal Resources (CTR) recently signed a power purchase agreement (PPA) for 40MW of geothermal energy with Imperial Irrigation District, a water - and energy - provider in Southern California.

CTR is also now creating Hell's Kitchen Co, facilities for lithium extraction and chemical processing at its geothermal plant at Imperial Valley’s shallow, saline Salton Sea. CTR has now partnered with technology provider Lilac Solutions, which has its own proprietary ion exchange technology, to open up a pilot plant to extract lithium from the run-off geothermal brine.

Expected to be up and running and able to deliver 17,350 tonnes of lithium carbonate to battery grade, the plant is being built with a potential scale-up of up to 34,700 tonnes lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) per year by 2025 in mind. The partners claim it will be cheaper and more environmentally friendly than competing plants and processes for lithium extraction.

Using renewable energy to process geothermal brines for direct lithium extraction, the plant should be able to run 24/7 and without big requirements for water. The process, according to a press release, apparently takes “weeks, not months to produce high purity lithium products",

“Lilac has taken a fundamentally different approach to extraction of lithium from Salton Sea geothermal brine using unique ion exchange beads developed by our team in Oakland in contrast to prior work by others to adapt conventional aluminium-based absorbents which have not performed well in this application,” said Lilac Solutions’s CEO and founder Dave Snydacker.