Battery metals like lithium, nickel, and cobalt are seeing unprecedented demand due to the global shift toward electrification and renewable energy. Their critical role in lithium-ion batteries drives this surge (Mining Technology, 2024).
Lithium is in highest demand, with projections indicating a sixfold increase by 2030, fueled by electric vehicle (EV) growth and stationary energy storage systems (IEA, 2022). Its use in high-energy-density batteries for EVs and consumer electronics, coupled with limited high-grade deposits, intensifies demand (McKinsey, 2023). Lithium’s market is expected to grow from $12.27 billion in 2025 to $22.87 billion by 2033 (Straits Research, 2024).
Nickel follows closely, driven by its use in nickel-cobalt-manganese (NCM) batteries for EVs, which require high energy density. Demand is projected to rise 28-31 times by 2050, spurred by EV sales expected to hit 28 million units by 2030 (Nature, 2020). Nickel’s supply faces challenges, requiring significant new mining investments (IEA, 2022).
Cobalt, though seeing reduced use in some battery chemistries, remains critical for NCM cathodes due to its conductivity and stability. Its demand is expected to grow 17-19 times by 2050, driven by EVs and portable devices, despite ethical sourcing concerns ( MMTA, 2024). Supply constraints and reliance on byproducts from copper mining add pressure (McKinsey, 2024).
Challenges like supply chain bottlenecks persist (Gartner, 2022). These metals are pivotal for a low-carbon future.
Which battery metals do you see shaping the future of EVs or energy storage? Share your thoughts!