FOTW #1099, September 16, 2019: In 2017, Australia, Chile, and Argentina produced 91% of the World’s Lithium

Key materials used for lithium-ion batteries, lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese, and natural graphite, come from more than 30 different countries.

Vehicle Technologies Office

September 16, 2019
minute read time

Subscribe to Fact of the Week

Some key materials used for manufacturing lithium-ion batteries are lithium, cobalt, nickel, manganese, and natural graphite, which come from more than 30 different countries. In 2017, Australia, Chile, and Argentina produced 91% of all lithium while the rest of the world supplied the remaining 9%. The Democratic Republic of Congo produced 59% of the world’s cobalt. Other lithium-ion battery materials, such as nickel, have a more even distribution of production throughout the world. Learn more about U.S. efforts in lithium here.

Map of the world showing global production shares of selected lithium-ion battery materials by country in 2017
MaterialTotal Tons
Produced
CountryShare of
Production
Lithium43,000Australia44%
  Chile34%
  Argentina13%
  Rest of World9%
    
Cobalt110,000Democratic Republic of Congo59%
  Russia5%
  Australia5%
  Rest of World31%
    
Nickel2.1 millionPhilippines11%
  Canada10%
  Russia9%
  Australia9%
  Rest of the World61%
    
Manganese16 millionSouth Africa33%
  China16%
  Australia14%
  Rest of the World37%
    
Natural graphite1.2 millionChina67%
  India13%
  Brazil8%
  Rest of the World12%

Source: Clean Energy Manufacturing Analysis Center, “Are there enough materials to cover li-ion batteries?” August 15, 2018.

Fact #1099 Dataset

Return to 2019 Fact of the Week