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Bolivia Lithium Mining Threatens Indigenous Water Sources Amid EV Boom

জুলাই ২৩, ২০২৫
in business, English, International
Bolivia Lithium Mining Threatens Indigenous Water Sources Amid EV Boom
The vast, shimmering salt flats of Uyuni hold enough lithium to power millions of electric vehicles—but for Bolivia’s Indigenous communities, this “white gold” risks turning their ancestral lands into a desert. As global automakers race to secure battery materials, Bolivia’s government has inked deals with Chinese and Russian firms to extract 100,000+ tons annually from South America’s largest lithium reserve. Yet new industrial plants could consume 47.5 million cubic meters of water yearly—draining scarce resources from Quechua and Aymara villages that have farmed these highlands for centuries.

Bolivia Lithium Mining Ignites Economic Hopes and Environmental Fears

Bolivia controls over 21 million metric tons of lithium—23% of global reserves according to the U.S. Geological Survey. Recent partnerships, like China’s CBC’s $1.4 billion investment, promise to transform the nation into an EV battery hub. President Luis Arce hails the projects as Bolivia’s “industrial revolution,” projecting $5 billion in annual revenue by 2030.

But beneath the economic optimism lies an escalating water crisis. Each ton of lithium requires up to 2 million liters of water during extraction. In the arid Uyuni region, rainfall replenishes just 3 million cubic meters annually. María Choque, a Quechua hydrologist with Bolivia’s Environmental Defense League, warns: “The salt flat isn’t just mineral deposits—it’s a complex hydrological system. Drilling disrupts underground aquifers that feed our wells and pastures.”

Water Scarcity Hits Indigenous Communities Hardest

For 14,000 Quechua and Aymara residents near the Salar de Uyuni, water dictates survival. Over 90% rely on shallow wells, mountain springs, and seasonal rains for drinking water and llama herds. Julio Mamani, a farmer from Colcha K, describes vanishing resources: “Our springs dried up after drilling started. The little water left tastes bitter and burns our skin.”

Recent studies by Bolivia’s Oruro Technical University confirm alarming changes:

  • Water tables dropped 4 meters near lithium pilot sites
  • Contaminants like magnesium and lead exceed WHO limits
  • Desertification expanded 12% in five years, shrinking grazing lands

The government promotes “direct lithium extraction” (DLE) technology as water-efficient, but UNESCO hydrogeologist Dr. Elena López counters: “DLE still requires massive brine pumping. Evaporation ponds alone lose 30% of water to wind and sun—this isn’t sustainable in drought-prone areas.”

Legal Battles Challenge Mining Expansion

Bolivia’s constitution and ILO Convention 169 mandate Indigenous consultation before resource projects. Yet communities allege negotiations never occurred. “They showed us glossy brochures but ignored our maps of sacred sites,” says Aymara leader Tomasa Yarhui.

In March 2024, the Potosí High Court halted new lithium contracts pending:

  1. Independent environmental impact assessments
  2. Community consent via free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) protocols
  3. Water protection plans verified by UNESCO hydrologists

The ruling cited precedents from Chile’s Atacama Desert, where lithium mining reduced wetlands by 40% and devastated flamingo populations.

Regional Lessons Highlight Irreversible Damage

Neighboring Argentina and Chile—part of South America’s “lithium triangle”—demonstrate the stakes. Research in Nature Sustainability shows:

  • It takes 500,000 gallons of water to produce one ton of lithium carbonate
  • Aquifers near Argentina’s Olaroz mine dropped 25% in a decade
  • Chile’s Salar de Atacama lost 65% of its surface water since 1990

“Bolivia risks repeating these disasters,” warns Dr. Ingrid Garcés, a Chilean geochemist. “Once brine is extracted, underground layers collapse permanently. No revenue can restore that.”

Can Technology Balance Profit and Protection?

Bolivia’s state-owned YLB promises “green lithium” using DLE to recycle 80% of water. However, MIT researchers note DLE’s high energy demands could increase carbon emissions by 35% versus traditional methods.

Communities propose alternatives:

  • Prioritizing geothermal lithium from natural hot springs
  • Limiting extraction to 20,000 tons/year until water studies conclude
  • Directing 30% of lithium profits to regional water infrastructure

“Lithium should lift all Bolivians, not just foreign shareholders,” argues Carlos Cox, an Oruro University economist. “Without water justice, this industry has no social license.”

As Bolivia’s lithium rush accelerates, the Quechua and Aymara people face an impossible choice: sacrifice their water for the world’s electric cars or defend resources that sustain life itself. The outcome hinges on whether leaders prioritize people over profit—before the wells run dry. Demand ethical lithium sourcing by supporting Indigenous-led conservation groups.

Must Know

How much lithium does Bolivia have?
Bolivia holds 23% of global lithium reserves—over 21 million metric tons beneath the Salar de Uyuni. While historically underdeveloped, new partnerships aim to export 100,000+ tons annually by 2025.

Why is lithium mining water-intensive?
Extracting lithium requires pumping mineral-rich brine into evaporation ponds for 12-18 months. Each ton of lithium consumes 500,000–2,000,000 gallons of water through evaporation and chemical processing.

How are Indigenous communities affected?
Mining reduces groundwater levels and contaminates wells with heavy metals. For 14,000 Quechua and Aymara people reliant on farming and herding, this threatens food security, cultural sites, and public health.

What legal protections exist?
Bolivian law and international treaties require free, prior, and informed consent (FPIC) for projects on Indigenous lands. Courts recently halted new lithium deals until FPIC and environmental reviews occur.

Can “green lithium” technology help?
Direct lithium extraction (DLE) may reduce water use by 50% versus evaporation ponds. However, it requires significant energy and doesn’t eliminate brine extraction’s impact on aquifers.



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