Lithium extends surge to one-year high

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UCapital24 Media

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Lithium carbonate prices climbed further to CNY 81,000 per tonne in August, extending their sharp rally and erasing this year’s earlier slump to reach the highest level in a year.


The surge has been fueled by mounting expectations of supply tightening, with lower output from key mines outweighing ongoing oversupply concerns that had dominated sentiment earlier in 2025.


Investor confidence strengthened after the Chinese government pledged to impose capacity cuts across major industrial sectors that have faced persistent deflationary pressures in recent years. As the world’s largest refined lithium producer, any policy-driven production discipline from China carries significant weight in global market dynamics.


Speculation over a broader overhaul of mining regulations has also intensified following news that CATL — the world’s leading battery manufacturer — suspended operations at its Jianxiawo lithium mine after failing to renew a critical mining permit. The facility accounts for around 5% of global lithium supply, and its shutdown has raised the prospect of a meaningful shortfall if production cannot be restarted quickly.


Last year, global lithium output surged 35% thanks to strong production growth in China, Indonesia, and the Democratic Republic of Congo, which helped drive prices down from record highs. Output from major producers had been expected to rise again in 2025, as miners largely avoided voluntary production cuts in order to defend market share and preserve long-term supply agreements with governments and battery makers.


However, the combination of regulatory uncertainty, environmental policy shifts, and the risk of further operational disruptions is prompting a reassessment of those forecasts.


Looking ahead, if policy-driven capacity reductions in China coincide with sustained demand growth from the electric vehicle and energy storage sectors, the market could face a faster-than-anticipated tightening into 2026. In that scenario, prices could remain elevated despite the potential for new supply from emerging projects, keeping investor focus firmly on both Chinese regulatory developments and global project timelines.