Washington’s drive to make the United States a major global lithium producer is being held back by a confusing mix of state regulations that are deterring developers and hampering efforts to break China’s control of the critical minerals sector.

Across Texas, Louisiana and other mineral-rich states, it’s unclear who owns the millions of metric tons of lithium locked in salty brines underneath U.S. soils, how the battery metal should be valued by regulators and who ultimately should pay to process it into a form usable by manufacturers.

These legal ambiguities are the latest impediment - alongside technical challenges and sagging commodity prices - to America’s plans to produce more of its own lithium and wean the country off foreign supplies, according to interviews with regulators from seven U.S. states, legal experts, politicians, landowners, investors, royalty firms, industry executives and consultants.

U.S. federal officials in Washington are largely powerless to force states to change regulations, leaving the Biden administration’s aggressive electrification targets beholden to the pace at which local officials update outdated statutes.

  • TheDemonBuer@lemmy.world
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    8 months ago

    U.S. federal officials in Washington are largely powerless to force states to change regulations, leaving the Biden administration’s aggressive electrification targets beholden to the pace at which local officials update outdated statutes.

    I don’t think the US can continue on the way it is, somewhere between a federation of independent states and a single nation. I think we have to commit to one or the other, I don’t think this hybrid model will work.

    • tsonfeir@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      Agreed. I propose a separate model, based on region, not state lines as they are.

      Cascadia now!

    • BuelldozerA
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      8 months ago

      The profit motive doesn’t work because the Government can’t force an action that it wants? Huh?