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Economic Development

Test success brings £250m Cornish lithium quarry a step closer

Company carries out test drilling for valuable metal vital for batteries and new technologies

Geologist Edward-Hill left with MetAmpere chief executive Andrew-Smith testing for lithium in Cornwall

The first company to drill lithium exploration holes in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ is carrying out further excavation work in Cornwall with aim to build a quarry and processing plant – and pump £120million a year into the county’s economy.

The idea is for the £275million quarry and plant to produce up to 20,000 tonnes of the highly sought-after metal each year – sufficient to power 350,000 electric vehicles.

MetAmpere has successfully completed six exploration drill holes, and now its team of geologists are digging kilometres of trenches to establish continuity of the discovered ore body.

Laboratory analysis of that drilling revealed more than 200 metres of continuous lithium mineralisation from the surface.

MetAmpere is testing for lithium in Cornwall

The trenching and further drilling will allow an Independent expert to declare a Maiden JORC Resource Statement next year.

This is the Australasian code for reporting of exploration results, mineral resources and ore reserves and a professional code of practice that sets minimum standards for public reporting of minerals exploration results, mineral resources and ore reserves.

MetAmpere, based in Roche, is planning to undertake more drilling in the next two months.

Lithium is used in an increasing number of devices, such as thermometers, remote car locks, laser pointers, MP3 players, hearing aids, calculators and battery backup systems in computers.