Spanish industrial consortium unveils Battchain initiative to support green mobility

Key industrial groups in Spain have set up Battchain, a consortium created to respond to surging demand for batteries in Europe at a time when the region is transitioning to greener mobility, junior miner Infinity Lithium announced on Wednesday February 10.

Battchain will focus on expanding Spain’s battery value chain from sourcing raw materials locally to battery recycling. The consortium is led by the EIT Innoenergy initiative.

Infinity Lithium – which is currently developing a lithium extraction site in the Spanish region of Extremadura – is a member of the consortium.

The group is seeking funding of up to €1.2 billion ($1.45 billion) to develop its industrial projects that will serve mainly the Spanish automotive sector to meet building momentum for a transition to greener mobility.

The consortium has submitted an expression of interest to receive funding under the Spanish government’s Programme for the Promotion of Industrial Competitiveness and Sustainability projects.

The program provides loans and grants partly funded by the coronavirus pandemic recovery fund of €750 billion that was agreed in July 2020 by European Union leaders.

Among projects that will receive funding is the lithium extraction project in Extremadura being developed by Infinity Lithium. Some 15,000 tonnes per year will be extracted and refined locally, according to the consortium press release.

The EIT Innoenergy initiative was established in 2010 to foster the development of innovative energy projects in Europe under the European Commission’s mandate.

Raw materials such as lithium are key component of the lithium-ion rechargeable batteries used to power electric vehicles (EV), sales of which are expected to increase sharply in the coming years while Europe and other regions move toward a low-carbon future.

Fastmarkets’ weekly price assessment for lithium carbonate 99.5% Li2CO3 min, battery grade, spot price ddp Europe and US was $8.50-10 per kg on Thursday February 11, up from $7.50-8.50 per kg at the end of last year but down from $10-11 per kg a year ago.

What to read next
The DRC is set to decide on the future of its cobalt export ban on June 22, potentially extending, modifying or ending the policy. Aimed at boosting local refining and value creation, the ban has left global markets uncertain, with stakeholders calling for clarity as cobalt prices fluctuate and concerns over long-term demand grow.
Fastmarkets' Tina Tong discusses adopting ESG practices for a sustainable ferro-alloys future
The US trade roller coaster ride seems to be flattening, with signs of potential moderation and stability. It appears increasingly likely that our original expectation that the US Trump administration would primarily use the threat of tariffs as a negotiating strategy will be correct. While we do not expect to the US tariff position return to pre-2025 levels, we believe the overall US tariff burden is more likely to settle at around 10-30% globally rather than the elevated rates of 50-100% that seemed possible in recent weeks.
Fastmarkets proposes to launch Nordic sawn timber export prices for selected European markets and grades, while discontinuing the PIX Sawn Timber FAS Finland indices. The PIX sawn timber FAS Finland indices have not been widely adopted by the industry and the new price assessments will offer more end-market-specific data for major European markets and will […]
Read Fastmarkets' monthly battery raw materials market update for May 2025, focusing on raw materials including lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite and more
To increase transparency, Fastmarkets has further clarified how it handles price movements during periods of low liquidity. Factors that Fastmarkets may consider during times of low liquidity include, but are not limited to: market fundamentals such as changes in inventory levels, shipments, operating rates and export volumes; relative fundamentals of similar commodities in the same […]