Not much stirs in the sleepy hilltop village of Salal in the Reasi district of Jammu and Kashmir. It does offer a commanding view of the serpentine Chenab river, alongside sparkling snowcapped mountains and green hills. The district is also home to two of India’s engineering marvels—the 690MW Salal hydropower project and the world’s highest rail bridge. The 1,315-metre-long arch bridge is 359 metres above the Chenab river bed. That is 35 metres higher than the Eiffel Tower in Paris.
But no one imagined that—apart from offering construction material— the rocky terrain here would put Salal at the centre of the global market for lithium. The soft, silvery-white alkali metal is used in a range of key components of rechargeable batteries, solar panels, mobile phones, laptops and even psychiatric drugs.
Last month, after the 62nd meeting of the apex Central Geological Programming Board, the Union ministry of mines announced, among other things, that Salal—77 km away from Jammu city—has substantial lithium deposits for exploration. The initial estimate suggests a staggering potential of 5.9 million tonnes (MT) of ‘inferred’ resources of the metal, a figure that sent many— from the government, the industry and the village—into an ecstatic whirl. The final deposit amount could be less than predicted but the preliminary findings by the Geological Survey of India (GSI) suggest that India may be home to the sixth largest reserves of lithium in the world, ahead of China’s known reserves of 5.1 MT. If the GSI’s findings bear out, this could kickstart India’s electric vehicles (EV) revolution.
Esta historia es de la edición March 20, 2023 de India Today.
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