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the times news article

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    From The Times
    November 6, 2008
    Japanese industry set for a lithium rush as
    carmakers turn focus to green motoring
    Leo Lewis, Asia Business Correspondent
    Japan's largest automotive and electronics giants are poised to embark on a worldwide scramble for
    lithium - the material that could be required in bulk if the roads of the future are to be filled with
    electric cars.
    Companies as diverse as Toyota and Panasonic could add mining or lithium-extraction operations to
    their portfolio of businesses as the technology that powers laptops and iPods is upgraded to drive the
    Chevrolet Volt, the Mitsubishi Miev and a dozen other electric cars that are on their drawing-boards.
    The lithium-ion battery has recently emerged as a potentially critical stop-gap green technology as the
    motor industry gradually weans itself off the internal combustion engine. Although substantial
    advances have been made in the production of a commercially viable fuel cell vehicle, infrastructure
    issues - such as the lack of any network of hydrogen fuelling stations - mean it could be some decades
    before they enter the mainstream. Cars that can be plugged in and charged overnight, meanwhile,
    represent a more immediate development focus for the carmakers.
    The impending rush to secure stable lithium supplies comes as large swaths of Japanese industry are
    suffering a crisis of confidence about their pipeline of raw materials. As a country that relies entirely on
    imports to feed its factories, companies now talk of building “upstream supply” in the form of
    investment in mines.
    Related Links
    • Panasonic wary of rivals as it prepares Sanyo bid
    • Panasonic poised to launch bid for Sanyo
    Panasonic, which stands to become the world's largest producer of lithium batteries if it completes its
    planned purchase of Sanyo, its local Osaka rival, has amassed a $10 billion (£6.2 billion) cash reserve
    for overseas acquisition.
    A company spokesman said that while it had no concrete plans at the moment, purchasing an interest in
    a lithium production facility could “be thought of as one option”.
    In addition to the emerging pursuit of lithium, Japanese trading companies have begun an energetic
    land-grab for other types of mines: bauxite, platinum and nickel are prime targets because of the huge
    demand from Japanese industry.
    Stung by soaring prices earlier this year, motor companies have even begun to look at securing their
    own supplies of raw materials for steel production. Toyota Trading - an affiliate of the carmaker - has
    already bought part of a coking coal mine and admitted that further mine investments, including
    lithium, were a possibility.
    Research by The Times suggests that at least ten leading Japanese companies have begun investigating
    ways of securing lithium supplies, or are mulling corporate alliances that would guarantee a degree of
    price stability. Some are considering outright purchases of existing lithium production facilities in Chile
    and Argentina, while others are looking at investing in planned lithium plants in China.
    Global leaders in lithium-ion batteries, such as Sanyo and NEC Tokin, have unveiled improvements to
    the technology that have persuaded big carmakers, such as Nissan, to invest heavily in the development
    of next-generation electric cars.
    Nissan's own electric car development team is aiming to design lithium batteries with three times the
    charge capacity
 
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