Tesla lithium battery deal charges SA miner’s share price

The legally binding term sheet with Tesla is for the supply of up to 110,000 tonnes of Li2O spodumene concentrate from the Finniss Lithium Project over a four-year term, with pricing referenced to the market price for spodumene concentrate.

Prior to the Tesla announcement, approximately 80 per cent of Finniss’ initial output was covered under four-year offtake agreements with Ganfeng, one of the world’s largest lithium producers by production capacity, and Yahua, a key lithium supplier to Tesla.

Core Lithium Managing Director Stephen Biggins said subject to execution of a definitive agreement, Core’s supply to Tesla is scheduled to start in 2023 and will last  four years from supply commencement or until 110,000 dry metric tonnes had been delivered.

“This adds to the previously announced binding offtake agreements with existing customers over four years,” he said in a statement to shareholders yesterday.

“Core Lithium is thrilled to have reached this agreement with Tesla and look forward to further growing this relationship in the years to come.

“Tesla is a world-leader in electric vehicles and its investment in offtake and interest in our expansion plans forxjmtzyw downstream processing are very encouraging.”

Core Lithium enjoyed a 321 per cent surge in its share price last year from 15 cents to 59 cents after committing to building the lithium mine and processing plant in the Northern Territory.

The company also announced in December a move to a new head office in Adelaide’s Flinders Street from King William Street to cater for its growing workforce.

“The transition to a larger corporate premises is both a reflection of the strong and consistent growth we have experienced as a business over the past 18 months, and a foreshadowing of the space and larger corporate workforce we will be requiring as we evolve from an exploration company to a fully-fledged lithium miner,” Biggins said in December.

The Finniss project is about 25km from the port of Darwin, is the first lithium mine in the Northern Territory and the first new significant Australian lithium mine in more than a decade.

A decision on Stage 2 of the project, an expansion of its concentrate production, is expected this year. A feasibility study into Stage 3, which would enable Core to begin downstream lithium hydroxide production in the Northern Territory, is underway.