Your current location is:{Current column} >>Text
California approves lithium tax despite industry's warnings By Reuters
{Current column}3949People have watched
Introduction© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Sunset is reflected in the Salton Sea as seen from Bombay Beach, California, ...

By Ernest Scheyder
(Reuters) - California on Thursday approved a plan to tax the electric vehicle battery metal lithium to generate revenue for environmental remediation projects despite industry concerns that it will harm the sector and delay shipments to automakers.
Governor Gavin Newsom, a Democrat, approved the tax as part of a must-pass state budget on Thursday. The state legislature had signed off on the levy during deliberations on Wednesday night.
The tax is structured as a flat-rate per tonne and will go into effect in January. The tax will be reviewed every year, and state officials have agreed to study potentially switching to a percentage-based tax.
The largest American state sits atop giant lithium reserves in its Salton Sea region, east of Los Angles, an area heavily damaged in the 20th century by years of heavy pesticide use from farming. Funds generated from the tax are earmarked in part to cleanup of the area.
Federal officials have praised the area's start-up lithium industry because it would deploy a geothermal brine process that is more environmentally friendly than open-pit mines and brine evaporation ponds, the two most common existing methods to produce lithium.
Two of the area's three lithium companies warned the tax would scare off investors and customers. Both said they may leave the state for lithium-rich brine deposits in Utah or Arkansas.
Privately-held Controlled Thermal Resources Ltd said the tax would force it to miss deadlines to deliver lithium to General Motors Co (NYSE:GM) by 2024 and Stellantis NV by 2025.
EnergySource Minerals LLC, also privately held, said it halted discussions with potential financiers and an automaker.
"Supporting a tax that ensures lithium imports from China are less expensive for auto manufacturers to secure will devastate this promising Californian industry before it has begun," said Rod Colwell, Controlled Thermal's chief executive.
Statement: The content of this article does not represent the views of FTI website. The content is for reference only and does not constitute investment suggestions. Investment is risky, so you should be careful in your choice! If it involves content, copyright and other issues, please contact us and we will make adjustments at the first time!
Tags:
Related articles
McCarthy says some progress made in US debt ceiling talks with White House By Reuters
{Current column}By David Morgan, Richard Cowan and Andy SullivanWASHINGTON (Reuters) -White House and Republican neg ...
Read more7 analyst picks: Intel stock upgraded; 'things unlikely to get worse'
{Current column}By Davit Kirakosyan-- Here is your daily Pro Recap of the biggest analyst picks you may have missed ...
Read moreNorwegian wealth fund seeks Credit Suisse boardroom shake
{Current column}(Reuters) - Norges Bank Investment Management will vote against the re-election of Credit Suisse Cha ...
Read more
Popular Articles
- Top Stocks That Usually Defy Gravity During Economic Slowdowns
- Chinese manufacturing PMI slows in March, services hit 12
- Dollar edges lower; safe haven loses appeal as banking turmoil eases By
- VW pledges to double down on EVs in China, urges extension of NEV tax breaks By Reuters
- Musk threatens to reassign NPR Twitter account, NPR says By Reuters
- Humans vs. machines: the fight to copyright AI art By Reuters
Latest articles
-
Top 5 things to watch in markets in the week ahead By
-
Manchin threatens to sue US Treasury over EV tax credit rules By Reuters
-
7 analyst picks: Intel stock upgraded; 'things unlikely to get worse'
-
Syria says Israel hits Homs outposts, sources say air bases bombed By Reuters
-
US House votes to repeal Biden solar tariff waiver By Reuters
-
Dollar remains weak as Fed nears end of hiking cycle By