LATAM Nations
- March 30, 2022
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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LATAM Nations
Subject: Geography
Section: Economic Geography
Context- The KhanijBidesh India Ltd or KABIL is engaging with primarily LATAM nations for Lithium Reserves and Cobalt Mines.
Concept-
- India has committed to invest $6 million jointly with the Australian government in lithium and cobalt mines in Australia in the next six months.
- The KhanijBidesh India Ltd or KABIL – a mining joint venture between the state-run National Aluminium Company Ltd (NALCO), Hindustan Copper Ltd and Mineral Exploration Corp Ltd – has signed a preliminary agreement with Australia’s Critical Minerals Facilitation Office (CMFO).
- Engagements are also underway with other source countries (primarily LATAM nations) such as Argentina, Bolivia, Chile.
LATAM Nations:
- Latin America is the portion of the Americas comprising countries and regions where Romance languages—languages that derived from Latin—such as Spanish, Portuguese, and French are predominantly spoken.
- The term was originally used to refer to places in the Americas that were ruled under the Spanish, Portuguese, and French empires.
- The countries included are: Argentina, Bolivia (Plurinational State of), Brazil, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Ecuador, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Paraguay, Peru, the Dominican Republic and Uruguay.
Lithium Triangle:
- Lithium Triangle is an intersection of Chile, Bolivia and Argentina, known for high quality salt flats.
- Salar de Uyuni in Bolivia, Salar de Atacama in Chile and Salar de Arizaro in Argentina contains over 45%of known global lithium reserves.
- Beneath Salar de Uyuni, the world’s largest salt flat lies the world’s greatest lithium deposits.
- Bolivia, one of South America’s poorest countries, envisions development by harvesting lithium on an industrial scale from underground saltwater brines.
- It can be mined from rock or processed from brine.
- Lithium dissolved in underground saline aquifers called “brine”, pumped to surface by wells and then allowed to evaporate in vast knee-deep ponds.
About Lithium:
- Lithium is a chemical element with symbol Li and atomic number 3.
- It is a soft, silvery-white alkali metal.
- Under standard conditions, it is the lightest metal and the lightest solid element.
- Lithium is highly reactive and flammable, and is stored in mineral oil.
- It never occurs freely in nature, but only in (usually ionic) compounds, such as pegmatitic minerals, which were once the main source of lithium.
- Due to its solubility as an ion, it is present in ocean water and is commonly obtained from brines.
- Lithium metal is isolated electrolytically from a mixture of lithium chloride and potassium chloride.
- Lithium is a key component used in Electric Vehicle batteries. And India, through its ₹ 18,100- crore PLI scheme is offering incentives for companies to build battery cells locally.
- China and Hong Kong are the biggest lithium battery suppliers to India.
Applications:
- Lithium and its compounds have several industrial applications, including heat-resistant glass and ceramics, lithium grease lubricants, flux additives for iron, steel and aluminium production, lithium batteries, and lithium-ion batteries.
- It works with other elements, drugs, enzymes, hormones, vitamins, and growth factors in the body in many different ways. People use it for medicine.
- Lithium salts have proven to be useful as a mood-stabilizing drug in the treatment of bipolar disorder in humans.