Lithium Holds Rebound
2026-04-01 10:30
By
Andre Joaquim
1 min. read
Lithium carbonate prices in China rose past CNY 160,000 per tonne in April, the highest in nearly one month and gaining 40% since the start of the year amid bullish demand expectations in the near and longer terms.
The surge in crude oil and product prices since the start of March supported the outlook for larger economies to favor new energy vehicles, which use batteries that take lithium as a major input.
Likewise, BYD forecasted it will sell 1.5 million units overseas this year, revised higher from the January estimate of 1.3 million units.
Demand also remained supported by Chinese investment in power infrastructure, recently exemplified by the announcement of higher power storage spending.
This was combined with Beijing stating it would double national EV charging capacity to 180 gigawatts by 2027, supporting lithium-rich energy storage systems.
In the meantime, Zimbabwe suspended exports of lithium concentrates and other raw materials to stimulate refining in the county.