Construction to resume at Kwinana lithium hydroxide processing plant

Construction work will restart in the near future at the Kniwana lithium hydroxide plant in Western Australia after Australia-based exploration and mining company IGO joined the venture at the end of 2020, a spokesperson at joint-owner Tianqi told Fastmarkets on Tuesday May 4.

“It has been a challenging project and we are all very excited about the upcoming milestones,” the spokesperson at the Chinese lithium producer said.

Construction work has stalled at the facility on a number of occasions due to Tianqi’s financial troubles and tight liquidity. Tianqi said in April last year it was exploring asset or equity sales, or the possibility of bringing in new domestic or foreign investors to ease the financial pressure of growing debt.

At the end of 2020, IGO announced that it had entered into a binding agreement to acquire a 49% indirect interest in the Kwinana lithium hydroxide plant (with the remaining 51% owned by Tianqi) and a 24.99% indirect interest in the Greenbushes Lithium Mining and Processing Operation. Both assets are in Western Australia. The two companies expect to finalize the transaction in the second quarter of 2021, pending regulatory approval.

The Kwinana plant will have an output capacity of 48,000 tonnes per year of battery grade lithium hydroxide upon completion, to be achieved in two stages each of 24,000 tpy.

Tianqi had originally planned for the the first phase to production in the fourth quarter of 2022. No new timeline has been shared for the plant’s productions schedule.

Australia is a key exporter of spodumene, the raw material that is processed to produce lithium salts. Most of the processing capacity is currently in China, where the majority of spodumene is exported.

The Kwinana lithium processing plant will allow part of the spodumene extracted in Australia to be processed into lithium salts locally, moving some lithium production away from China.

Lithium is a key ingredient in batteries used to power electric vehicles (EVs) and demand for lithium is expected to grow exponentially in the medium term due to increased demand for EVs globally.

Fastmarkets’ latest assessment of the lithium hydroxide monohydrate, 56.5% LiOH.H2O min, battery grade, spot price, cif China, Japan & Korea was $12.50-13.50 per kg on May 6, unchanged over the past fortnight but down from $11.50-13.00 per kg on April 22.

What to read next
The publication of Fastmarkets’ assessments of the nickel min 99.8% full plate premium, in-whs Shanghai, and the nickel min 99.8% full plate premium, cif Shanghai for Tuesday May 26 were delayed because of a reporter error. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated. The following prices were affected:MB-NI-0143 Nickel min 99.8% full plate premium, in-whs Shanghai, […]
While governments and industry accelerate efforts to secure the materials underpinning energy security, national defense and industrial competitiveness, Fastmarkets will be convening more than 1,250 leaders from across the global critical minerals value chain in Las Vegas this June.  Fastmarkets’ 18th Global Lithium, Battery and Critical Materials Conference, (June 22–25, 2026) has evolved into a leading forum for the critical minerals ecosystem – spanning lithium, nickel, […]
Chrome ore inventories at the main ports of Tianjin, Qinzhou, Lianyungang and Shanghai were originally published at 5.11 million to 5.3 million tonnes on Monday. This has been corrected to 3.74 million to 4.03 million tonnes. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated to reflect these changes. These inventories are part of the Fastmarkets Ores and […]
The recent appreciation of the Chinese yuan against the US dollar is rippling through Asia’s ferrosilicon market, squeezing Chinese export margins, lifting regional prices and shifting currency risks downstream to buyers.
As CBAM and the EU ETS reshape cost structures across Europe’s automotive supply chains, OEMs are under growing pressure to protect margins while navigating opaque carbon pass-through.
The amendment follows the decision made on May 14, after a consultation period for the proposed changes, which took place between April 2 and May 11. The purpose of the change is to align the publication times to the activity in the relevant markets and ensure that subscribers receive timely and accurate pricing information. The affected […]