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| Vulcan Energy |
Vulcan Energy German lithium licence approval strengthens the company’s plan to bring its Lionheart lithium hydroxide project in Germany into commercial production in 2028. The Australian developer has secured a six-year commercial production licence for its Insheim production area, a key part of the planned 24,000 t/yr lithium hydroxide project.
The licence supports Vulcan Energy’s integrated geothermal lithium model. At Insheim, the company extracts lithium-rich geothermal brine while generating renewable energy, linking battery materials production with low-carbon power generation.
The Vulcan Energy German lithium licence also improves project credibility at a critical stage. The company began construction at Lionheart in February 2026 and secured a mix of grant, equity, and debt funding in December 2025. Further production licences will still be needed as Vulcan expands the project footprint.
German Geothermal Lithium Gains Industrial Relevance
Germany’s battery supply chain needs domestic and regional lithium sources to reduce dependence on imported raw materials. Vulcan’s Lionheart project targets that gap by producing lithium hydroxide from geothermal brine in Europe’s largest automotive market.
The Insheim licence gives Vulcan a regulated path to commercial production in one of its core operating areas. The initial term runs for six years, but the company plans to apply for an extension of at least 30 years. That longer horizon matters because battery material customers need supply security beyond short contract cycles.
The Vulcan Energy German lithium licence also supports Europe’s broader industrial policy goals. Lithium hydroxide remains essential for high-nickel cathode chemistries used in electric vehicles. A domestic German source could help automakers and cathode producers reduce supply chain risk.
Offtake Commitments Support Lionheart Financing
Vulcan has already placed most of its initial Lionheart output under offtake arrangements. The company expects to sell 94-99pc of early production to four customers, including Glencore and Stellantis.
Glencore will receive around 20pc of Lionheart output over eight years. This commitment gives Vulcan a major commodity partner while providing Glencore with exposure to European lithium hydroxide supply.
The project still faces execution risk. Vulcan must secure additional licences, complete construction, prove commercial-scale brine processing, and deliver consistent battery-grade lithium hydroxide. However, permitting progress, customer commitments, and financing support make Lionheart one of Europe’s more advanced lithium supply projects.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Vulcan’s progress matters because Europe needs lithium projects that are both local and commercially bankable. The licence does not remove technical risk, but it moves geothermal lithium closer to becoming a real part of Germany’s battery materials supply chain.

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