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Mali Lithium |
Deal terms and strategic rationale
Ganfeng takes full control of Mali Lithium after buying the remaining 40% for $342.7mn. The seller was Australia’s Leo Lithium. The move consolidates ownership of the Goulamina lithium mine. Therefore, governance and execution will now follow a single operator. Ganfeng takes full control of Mali Lithium to secure upstream supply.
Ganfeng previously paid $138mn for 55% in September 2023. It added 5% for $65mn in January 2024. As a result, the company now holds 100% equity. This sequence reflects disciplined pacing in volatile lithium markets.
Project status and global supply outlook
The Goulamina resource totals 7.14mn t LCE at 1.37% Li₂O grade. Phase one construction began in 2022 with 506,000 t/y capacity. Production started in December 2024 and continues to ramp. The second phase targets 1mn t/y of spodumene. However, the timeline for phase two remains undisclosed.
Ganfeng completed its first Goulamina concentrate shipment on 24 June. The cargo is en route to China, arriving in early August. Meanwhile, group chemical output reached 130,253 t LCE in 2024. That figure rose 25% year over year.
The portfolio also includes Cauchari-Olaroz in Argentina. Nameplate capacity stands at 40,000 t/y of lithium carbonate. Output jumped to 25,400 t in 2024 from 6,000 t in 2023. It is expected to reach 30,000–35,000 t in 2025.
Ganfeng takes full control of Mali Lithium to align mine, shipping, and conversion. Therefore, integrated volumes should improve cost visibility and contract flexibility. However, execution will still hinge on phase-two clarity and logistics.
The Metalnomist Commentary
Full ownership removes JV complexity and accelerates decision-making at Goulamina. The heavy tilt toward spodumene supply strengthens Ganfeng’s conversion optionality in China. Watch phase-two scheduling, shipping cadence, and carbonate/hydroxide price spreads through 2026.