CATL Resumes Operations at Jiangxi Lithium Mine, UBS Reports
Chinese battery giant CATL (300750.SZ) is resuming production at its lithium lepidolite mine in Jiangxi province, according to a note from UBS published on Thursday. This comes four months after earlier reports of the mine’s closure sparked a surge in lithium mining stock prices.
UBS’s report indicates that mining operations have “currently resumed,” based on information from Shanghai Metals Market (SMM), though further details were not disclosed. UBS declined to comment further, and CATL did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for more information.
Two anonymous battery metals traders confirmed that mining activities had indeed restarted at the Jiangxi mine. CATL’s mine in the southern province of Jiangxi has been an important contributor to China’s growing lithium supply, which is essential for the global battery market. When the mine was reportedly closed in September, lithium stocks saw a significant rally.
In response to queries, CATL had previously stated that it adjusted its lithium production in the Yichun area of Jiangxi province. Lepidolite mining is known to be more expensive than extracting lithium from brine, but UBS analysts believe the resumption is driven by low inventories and CATL’s ability to reduce costs by mixing production from this site with higher-grade ores.
On Friday, the most-traded November lithium carbonate futures contract on the Guangzhou Futures Exchange closed at 77,800 yuan ($10,675.81) per metric ton, showing a modest 0.3% increase from the previous day. However, prices are still down by 4.75% from a recent high reached on January 20. CATL’s share price closed at 261.28 yuan per share on Friday, marking a 3.2% increase from Thursday.



