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    Korean study on Latin America lithium playbook: project strategy notes for miners

    December 12, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Korean study on Latin America lithium playbook: project strategy notes for miners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Korean researchers led by Seungho Lee at Jeonbuk National University map five distinct lithium governance models in Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia and Mexico, linking them to commodity price cycles, geopolitical competition and the maturity of each country’s lithium industry. Chile’s hybrid regime with strong state oversight contrasts with Argentina and Brazil’s decentralised, market-led systems, Bolivia’s tightly controlled state-led model and Mexico’s largely rhetorical nationalisation stance. The two-stage decision-making framework signals that miners, battery manufacturers and state-backed investors must tailor project, offtake and JV strategies to country-specific political settlements rather than apply a single Latin America playbook.

    Technical Brief

    • Two-stage decision framework explicitly sequences assessment of global price/geopolitics, then domestic political settlement.
    • Comparative governance mapping covers five jurisdictions: Chile, Argentina, Brazil, Bolivia and Mexico.
    • Research draws on policy analysis and case-based comparison published in *The Extractive Industries and Society*.
    • Framework links intervention intensity to industry maturity, distinguishing nascent, emerging and established lithium sectors.
    • Study treats lithium as a strategic input to EV and grid-scale storage supply chains.
    • Demand linked to EV production is projected to increase by more than 300% by 2030.

    Our Take

    Lithium and other battery metals now account for a notable slice of our 41 Policy stories, signalling that regulatory and social-licence frameworks in Chile, Argentina and Bolivia are becoming as material to project viability as brine chemistry or processing technology.

    A forecast 300% rise in lithium demand by 2030 puts additional strategic weight on Atacama’s Salt Flat and other Latin American salars, likely strengthening host-government leverage in royalty, water-use and community-benefit negotiations with operators such as SQM.

    With British Columbia also flagged in this piece alongside Latin America, policymakers and project developers in BC’s hard‑rock lithium space can treat the Korean research as a proxy case study for how Asian offtakers may approach ESG, permitting and state-participation risk across different jurisdictions.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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