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Been diving into the lithium market lately, and there's something really interesting happening with global lithium reserves by country that most people aren't paying enough attention to.
So here's the thing - everyone talks about lithium production numbers, but reserves tell a different story. Total global lithium reserves sit around 30 million metric tons as of 2024, and the distribution is pretty concentrated. What's wild is that China just dropped some major news in early 2025 about discovering a massive 2,800 kilometer lithium belt in their western regions. They're now claiming their national deposits account for 16.5% of global resources, up from just 6% previously. That's a significant shift in the supply landscape.
But let's back up and look at where the real lithium reserves by country actually are. Chile dominates with 9.3 million metric tons - they literally hold the largest reserves in the world. The Salar de Atacama region alone houses about a third of global lithium reserves. SQM and Albemarle run major operations there. Interesting note: Chile's government started pushing for nationalization back in 2023, trying to secure bigger stakes in these operations through their state company Codelco. By early 2025, they were running a bidding process for new lithium contracts across multiple salt flats.
Australia's second with 7 million metric tons in reserves, and here's what's counterintuitive - despite having fewer reserves than Chile, Australia was actually the world's largest lithium producer in 2024. Their lithium comes from hard-rock spodumene deposits rather than brines. The Greenbushes mine, operated by Talison Lithium (a joint venture between Tianqi Lithium, IGO, and Albemarle), has been churning out lithium since 1985. Recent research from University of Sydney and Geoscience Australia mapped lithium density across Australian soils and found untapped potential in Queensland, New South Wales, and Victoria beyond the traditional Western Australia focus.
Argentina's third at 4 million metric tons. Together with Chile and Bolivia, they form the "Lithium Triangle" holding over half the world's reserves. Argentina produced 18,000 metric tons last year and has around 50 advanced mining projects in the pipeline. Rio Tinto made a big move in late 2024, announcing a $2.5 billion investment to expand lithium extraction at their Rincon salar operations - ramping capacity from 3,000 to 60,000 metric tons over three years starting in 2028.
China holds 3 million metric tons in reserves, but here's what makes them powerful - they process most of the world's lithium-ion batteries and host the majority of global lithium-processing facilities. The US accused China in October 2024 of predatory pricing to eliminate competition, flooding the market to keep prices artificially low. China still imports most of its lithium from Australia despite having significant domestic production.
Other countries like the US (1.8 million MT), Canada (1.2 million MT), and Zimbabwe (480,000 MT) hold meaningful reserves too, but the top four dominate the landscape.
What's driving all this? Demand for lithium-ion batteries is expected to keep accelerating. EV and energy storage demand for lithium both grew over 30% year-on-year in 2025 according to Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. That's why these lithium reserves by country matter so much - they'll determine who captures value in the energy transition over the next decade.