Lithium Shortage Could Derail EV Boom by 2030, Study Warns
A new study published in Cell Reports Sustainability warns that the electric vehicle (EV) revolution may soon face a major hurdle: a looming lithium shortage. With EV sales accelerating globally—17 million in 2024 alone—the demand for lithium, essential for EV batteries, is outpacing projected domestic supply in major markets like the US, EU, and China.
The research reveals that by 2030, China will require 1.3 million metric tons of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE), Europe 792,000, and the US 692,000. However, supply forecasts show serious gaps: China can only provide 1.1 million, the US 610,000, and Europe just 325,000 metric tons from domestic sources.
This shortfall could trigger intense global competition for lithium. Most of it currently comes from Australia, Chile, and Argentina, which collectively produced 80% of the world’s lithium in 2023. The study suggests that a 77% increase in Chinese lithium imports could reduce US and EU imports by up to 84% and 78%, respectively.
While the situation is critical, researchers remain optimistic. Rising prices may spark investment in mining and battery innovation. Alternatives like sodium-ion batteries and battery recycling from aging EVs in the 2030s could also ease demand.China EV lithium
Dr. André Månberger of Lund University, the study’s co-author, believes innovation will meet the challenge, noting that while bottlenecks are easy to predict, technological responses often aren’t.affordable EV








