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    P&G earnings top estimates as price hikes offset rising costs, company raises 2022 sales forecast

    Procter & Gamble reported fiscal second-quarter earnings and revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations.
    The company raised its outlook for sales growth from a range of 2% to 4% to a range of 3% to 4%.
    P&G also said it expects commodity and freight costs to weigh even more heavily on its fiscal 2022 results.

    Procter & Gamble on Wednesday reported quarterly earnings and revenue that topped Wall Street’s expectations as price hikes helped offset higher commodity and freight costs.
    On the heels of its strong performance, the company raised its outlook for sales growth but said it expects inflation to weigh even more heavily on its fiscal 2022 results.

    Shares of P&G rose 1.3% in premarket trading.
    Here’s what the company reported compared with what Wall Street was expecting, based on a survey of analysts by Refinitiv:

    Earnings per share: $1.66 vs. $1.65 expected
    Revenue: $20.95 billion vs. $20.34 billion expected

    The consumer giant reported fiscal second-quarter net income of $4.22 billion, or $1.66 per share, up from $3.85 billion, or $1.47 per share, a year earlier. Analysts surveyed by Refinitiv were expecting $1.65 per share.
    Net sales rose 6% to $20.95 billion, topping expectations of $20.34 billion. Organic revenue, which strips out the impact of foreign currency, acquisitions and divestitures, also rose 6% in the quarter. About half of that growth came from the benefit of raising prices on select products.
    “While it’s very early for these commodity-based price increases, to date, we see positive signs,” CEO Jon Moeller said on CNBC’s “Squawk Box” on Wednesday. “Probably 20% to 30% less price elasticity than we were expecting, and if you look at, for example, private-label market shares — private label being the lowest price offered on the market — they’re down.”

    The company’s health care and fabric and home care segments both saw organic sales jump 8%, tying for the highest of its divisions. The company said a more intense flu and cold season propelled organic sales for its personal health care business by 20% for the quarter, lifting demand for Vicks and ZzzQuil products. Its oral care products, which include Oral-B toothbrushes and Crest toothpaste, got a boost from price increases.
    Price hikes also helped P&G’s home care segment, which includes Febreze and Mr. Clean. The pandemic has created more demand for cleaning products. P&G’s fabric care business saw double-digit growth, thanks to strong sales of fabric enhancers and laundry detergent pods.
    The company’s grooming division, which includes Venus and Gillette, saw organic sales jump 5%. The segment has struggled in recent years due to increased competition and shaving trends, but price hikes helped sales this quarter.
    Organic sales of the company’s baby, feminine and family care segment rose 5% in the quarter, largely due to higher prices. The division includes Pampers diapers, Charmin toilet paper and Bounty paper towels.
    P&G’s beauty segment reported the smallest organic sales change for the quarter, rising just 2%. But the company is looking to improve those results with three acquisitions in the category over the last three months, snapping up Farmacy Beauty, hair-care brand Ouai and Tula Skincare.
    “All of those focus on the premium channel in the U.S., so that’s an opportunity for us,” CFO Andre Schulten said on a call with journalists. “… We’ve successfully done these integrations, when you think about First Aid Beauty or Native [deodorant].”
    For fiscal 2022, P&G is now calling for 3% to 4% sales growth, up from its prior forecast of 2% to 4%. But the company didn’t change its outlook for earnings as it also predicted higher costs.
    For the second consecutive quarter, P&G increased its inflation forecast. The company expects to pay $2.3 billion after tax on commodity costs and $300 million after tax on higher freight costs, up from last quarter’s outlook of $2.1 billion on commodities and $200 million on freight. Combined with a $200 million headwind from foreign currency, P&G is forecasting a $2.8 million headwind, or $1.10 per share, to its fiscal 2022 earnings compared with the year prior.
    Read the full press release here.

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    Morgan Stanley shares rise after fourth-quarter profit tops estimates

    Here are the numbers: Earnings of $2.01 a share vs. estimate $1.91 a share, according to Refinitiv.
    Revenue: $14.52 billion vs. estimate $14.6 billion

    James Gorman, chairman and chief executive officer of Morgan Stanley, speaks during a Bloomberg Television interview in Beijing, China, on Thursday, May 30, 2019.
    Giulia Marchi | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Morgan Stanley on Wednesday posted better-than-expected fourth-quarter profits on strong equities trading revenue and as the firm held the line on compensation costs.
    Here are the numbers:

    ·        Earnings: $2.01 a share vs. estimate $1.91 a share, according to Refinitiv.
    ·        Revenue: $14.52 billion vs. estimate $14.6 billion
    Unlike its rivals, which disclosed that compensation costs for Wall Street personnel soared in the quarter, Morgan Stanley kept the line on expenses. The bank posted $5.49 billion in compensation expenses, below the $5.98 billion estimate of analysts surveyed by FactSet. Within its securities division, the bank said compensation fell from a year ago because of deferred compensation plans “linked to investment performance.”
    The bank said that equities trading revenue rose 13% from a year ago to $2.86 billion, roughly $400 million higher than the $2.44 billion FactSet estimate. The improvement was driven by rising prime brokerage revenue and a $225 million gain on a strategic investment.
    Investment management also topped estimates, rising 59% to $1.75 billion because of the bank’s Eaton Vance acquisition. Analysts had expected $1.66 billion.

    Meanwhile, wealth management revenue rose 10% to $6.25, essentially matching the $6.28 billion estimate, on rising asset management fees and growth in lending to clients.
    Investment banking revenue rose 6% to $2.43 billion, just under the $2.54 billion estimate, on higher advisory fees from mergers activity. And fixed income trading generated $1.23 billion in revenue, a 31% decline from a year earlier and below the $1.47 billion estimate.
    Shares of the bank climbed 1.6% in premarket trading.
    Trading in particular has begun to return to more normal volumes, if results from Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan Chase are any indication. Morgan Stanley has the No. 1 ranked equities trading business globally.
    It’s also a top player in mergers advice, particularly in the technology and communications realms.
    One area that should prove resilient is wealth management, which typically relies on fees based on assets under management that have been climbing along with rising markets.
    Shares of the bank have dropped 4.2% this year, underperforming the 8.6% gain of the KBW Bank Index.
    JPMorgan and Citigroup each reported the smallest earnings beats in the last seven quarters, and Goldman Sachs missed estimates for fourth quarter profit because of elevated expenses. Wells Fargo has been the sole bright spot so far in bank earnings after it gave targets for higher interest income and lower expenses.  
    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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    Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Bank of America, UnitedHealth, P&G and more

    Check out the companies making headlines before the bell:
    Bank of America (BAC) – Bank of America shares rallied 3.2% in the premarket after it beat estimates by 6 cents with a quarterly profit of 82 cents per share. Revenue was slightly below forecasts, but the bank’s overall performance was helped by strength in investment banking.

    UnitedHealth Group (UNH) – UnitedHealth earned an adjusted $4.48 per share for the fourth quarter, 17 cents above estimates, and the health insurer’s revenue also topped forecasts. UnitedHealth saw particular strength from its Optum unit’s drug benefits management business.
    Morgan Stanley (MS) – Morgan Stanley jumped 3.5% in the premarket after beating estimates by 10 cents with a quarterly profit of $2.01 per share, and revenue essentially in line with forecasts. Results got a boost from robust deal advisory fees on a very active quarter for merger and acquisition deals.
    Procter & Gamble (PG) – P&G added 1% in the premarket after beating estimates on the top and bottom lines for its fiscal second quarter and raising its organic growth outlook. P&G beat estimates by a penny with a profit of $1.66 per share, as consumers shrugged off price hikes for the company’s household staples.
    Sony (SONY) – Sony fell 3.9% in premarket trading on top of a 7.2% skid Tuesday. The drop followed news of Microsoft’s (MSFT) deal to buy video game maker Activision Blizzard (ATVI) for $68.7 billion, a transaction that would increase competitive pressure on Sony’s PlayStation operation.
    Alliance Data Systems (ADS) – Alliance Data lost 1.7% in premarket action, following news that warehouse retailer BJ’s Wholesale (BJ) is moving its co-branded credit card account to Capital One (COF). Alliance is also being sued by BJ’s, which claims the store credit card specialist is slowing down the transfer process. Alliance said it believes it is in full compliance with its contract.

    SoFi Technologies (SOFI) – SoFi surged 18% in premarket action after the financial technology company won regulatory approval to become a bank holding company.
    Zogenix (ZGNX) – Zogenix soared 65.9% in the premarket after agreeing to be acquired by Brussels-based biopharmaceutical company UCB for $26 dollars per share, compared with the $15.64 Tuesday closing price for Zogenix. UCB would also pay an extra $2 per share if the Zogenix drug fintepla – a treatment for a rare type of epilepsy – wins EU approval by the end of 2023.
    Tegna (TGNA) – Tegna is close to finalizing a $9 billion deal to be bought out by private equity firms Apollo Global Management and Standard General, according to sources familiar with the situation who spoke to the New York Post. The paper said the TV station operator was initially holding out for a roughly $500 breakup fee if the deal did not receive FCC approval in a timely manner, but has now backed off that demand. Tegna rallied 4.9% in the premarket.
    ASML (ASML) – ASML shares rose after reporting a better-than-expected fourth-quarter profit. The Dutch chipmaker also issued an upbeat 2022 sales growth forecast, with shares adding 2.2% in premarket trading.
    Pearson (PSON) – Pearson raised its full-year forecast amid strength across its education publishing portfolio and better-than-expected prospects for U.S. higher education courseware. Pearson shares jumped 7.2% in the premarket.

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    Bank of America earnings top estimates on release of pandemic loan loss reserves

    Here are the numbers: Earnings: 82 cents a share vs. 76 cents a shares estimate, according to Refinitiv
    Revenue: $22.17 billion vs. $22.2 billion estimate.

    Brian Moynihan, chairman and chief executive officer of Bank of America Corp, speaks in New York City, September 25, 2019.
    Shannon Stapleton | Reuters

    Bank of America on Wednesday topped analysts’ estimates for profit on record asset management and investment banking fees and the release of $851 million in loan loss reserves.
    Here are the numbers:Earnings: 82 cents a share vs. 76 cents a shares estimate, according to RefinitivRevenue: $22.17 billion vs. $22.2 billion estimate.

    The lender said that fourth quarter profit rose 28% to $7.01 billion, or 82 cents a share, topping the 76 cents a share average estimate of analysts surveyed by Refinitiv. Revenue rose 10% to $22.17 billion, just under the $22.2 billion estimate.
    The second biggest U.S. bank by assets said that credit quality improved during the quarter, allowing it to release the $851 million in reserves and book a nearly half billion dollar benefit after $362 million in chargeoffs. The bank said it was the lowest loss rate for loans in more than five decades.
    Shares of the lender rose 3% in premarket trading.
    Bank of America, led by CEO Brian Moynihan, had enjoyed tailwinds in recent months as rising interest rates and a rebound in loan growth promised to boost the industry’s profitability. But that narrative went off course after banks began disclosing the impact of wage inflation on results.
    Bank of America said that noninterest expenses rose 6% to $14.7 billion on higher pay for its workers. That’s a smaller increase than at rivals; JPMorgan Chase said last week that expenses jumped 11% to $17.9 billion and Goldman Sachs said costs surged 23% to $7.27 billion in the quarter.

    Analysts are likely to ask management about the impact of the bank’s recent decision to eliminate some fees and reduce overdraft charges to $10 from $35.
    Shares of Bank of America have climbed 4% this year before Wednesday, underperforming the 8.6% gain of the KBW Bank Index.
    JPMorgan and Citigroup each reported the smallest earnings beats in the last seven quarters, and Goldman Sachs missed estimates for fourth quarter profit because of elevated expenses. Wells Fargo has been the sole bright spot so far in bank earnings after it gave targets for higher interest income and lower expenses.  
    This story is developing. Please check back for updates.

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    TikTok owner ByteDance dissolves its investment arm

    After an assessment at the beginning of the year, ByteDance decided to “strengthen the focus of the business, reduce investments with low connection (to the main business) and disperse employees from the strategic investment department to various lines of business,” the spokesperson said in a Chinese-language statement translated by CNBC.
    The news comes as ByteDance is undergoing restructuring since its founder Zhang Yiming stepped down as chairman in the fall.

    TikTok logos are seen on smartphones in front of a displayed ByteDance logo in this illustration taken November 27, 2019.
    Dado Ruvic | Reuters

    BEIJING — TikTok owner ByteDance has disbanded its investment department, a company spokesperson told CNBC on Wednesday.
    Following an assessment at the beginning of the year, ByteDance decided to “strengthen the focus of the business, reduce investments with low connection (to the main business) and disperse employees from the strategic investment department to various lines of business,” the spokesperson said in a Chinese-language statement translated by CNBC.

    The move “strengthens the coordination between strategic research and the business,” the company said.
    The news comes as ByteDance is undergoing restructuring since its founder Zhang Yiming stepped down as chairman in the fall. The company has created six business units to focus on different areas from gaming to enterprise software.
    ByteDance, which is not publicly traded, is the world’s largest start-up valued at $140 billion, according to CB Insights.
    Investments and acquisitions have been a key part of Chinese tech giants’ growth over the years. Companies like Alibaba and Tencent have snapped up smaller players at home and abroad.

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    England looks to ease Covid rules while Europe is engulfed by omicron

    U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson is expected to announce that Covid rules in England will be eased when he makes a statement on the government’s “Plan B” strategy later on Wednesday.
    Johnson will go through the latest Covid data on Wednesday morning with his ministers, before making a statement to lawmakers, according to Sky News.
    Omicron cases are surging in mainland Europe, with France and Germany seeing record numbers.

    Senior doctor Thomas Marx puts on his personal protective gear before he enters the room of a patient with Covid-19 in an intensive care unit at a hospital in Freising, southern Germany.
    LENNART PREISS | AFP | Getty Images

    Plan B measures, implemented in December as the omicron Covid variant surged in the U.K., mean that face masks are compulsory in most indoor public settings such as public transport, shops, theaters and cinemas, and that people are advised to work from home if possible.
    High school pupils have to wear masks in classrooms as part of the strategy to reduce the spread of the highly infectious variant, and Covid passes — which show whether a person is fully vaccinated or has a recent negative test — are required for larger venues.
    Since the measures were introduced, the U.K. has embarked on a massive booster vaccination campaign and has seen the number of omicron cases fall. Booster shots restore much of the Covid vaccine protection lost owing to waning immunity, and against the more transmissible variant, which has undermined Covid shots more than its predecessor, the delta strain.

    At the peak of the omicron wave at the start of 2022, the U.K. was recording over 200,000 new Covid infections a day. It reported 94,432 new cases on Tuesday.
    “Decisions on the next steps remain finely balanced,” a U.K. government spokesperson noted on Tuesday.

    “Plan B was implemented in December to slow the rapid spread of the extremely transmissible omicron variant, and get more jabs in arms,” the spokesperson said, noting that 36 million booster shots have been administered across the U.K.
    However, the spokesperson added that the omicron variant “continues to pose a significant threat and the pandemic is not over. Infections remain high but the latest data is encouraging, with cases beginning to fall.”
    Virologists have widely predicted that the rise and fall of omicron cases should be shorter and sharper than with previous variants because of its heightened transmissibility. While more easily spread, however, the variant has so far appeared to cause less severe illness, so a surge in hospitalizations and deaths has not followed the rise in cases.
    On Tuesday, the Guardian newspaper reported that the British government could be set to announce that all Covid restrictions could end in March, two years after the U.K. went into its first lockdown in 2020, as the government pursues its plan for people to “learn to live with the virus.”
    There are early signs and hopes that the omicron wave has peaked in some U.S. states too, although the World Health Organization warned on Wednesday that the pandemic will not end as the omicron variant subsides in some countries, warning that the high levels of infection around the world will likely lead to new variants as the virus mutates.

    Europe’s omicron meltdown

    While England is looking to ease measures, such a strategy is unlikely to be implemented any time soon in mainland Europe, where omicron cases are spiking dramatically.
    France reported 464,769 new Covid infections on Tuesday, its highest recorded number during the pandemic, while Germany on Wednesday reported more than 100,000 cases, also a record for the country.

    In the Netherlands, frustration has grown at a continuing partial shutdown as Covid infections have risen despite restrictions. On Tuesday, 31,426 confirmed cases were reported, just lower than a record tally of around 42,000 cases hit at the start of the week.

    Last Friday, Dutch Prime Minister Mark Rutte announced the reopening of non-essential stores, hairdressers, beauty salons and gyms, noting that “we are taking a big step and that also means we’re taking a big risk.”
    But Rutte warned that uncertainties around the omicron variant meant that bars, restaurants and cultural venues would have to remain closed until at least Jan. 25.

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    Cruise operator Genting Hong Kong files to wind up company as cash runs out

    In a filing to the Hong Kong exchange, Genting said the company will “imminently be unable to pay its debts as they fall due,” as liquidity dries up.
    The embattled cruise operator said it filed the application to wind up the company at the Supreme Court of Bermuda, after the company “exhausted all reasonable efforts to negotiate with the relevant counterparties under its financing arrangements.”

    The Hong Kong skyline from on board the Genting Cruise Lines Genting Dream while berthed in Hong Kong on Wednesday, July 28, 2021.
    Lam Yik | Bloomberg | Getty Images

    Cruise operator Genting Hong Kong said Wednesday it has filed to wind up the company, as its cash is set to run out by end of January.
    It comes on the heels of warnings last week from the company that it could face potential cross-defaults on financing arrangements worth $2.8 billion, as a result of the insolvency of its German shipbuilding subsidiary MV Werften.

    In a filing to the Hong Kong exchange on Wednesday, Genting said the company will “imminently be unable to pay its debts as they fall due,” as liquidity dries up.
    The embattled cruise operator said it filed the application to wind up the company at the Supreme Court of Bermuda, after the company “exhausted all reasonable efforts to negotiate with the relevant counterparties under its financing arrangements.”
    However, the firm said in its Wednesday filing that certain businesses — including but not limited to the operations of cruise lines by Dream Cruises — shall continue.
    Genting Hong Kong owns Star Cruises and Dream Cruises, which operate in the Asia region, as well as the Resorts World theme park in Manila. It also owns the Crystal Cruises line which offers a range of round trips from Miami, Antarctica and Barcelona.
    “However it is anticipated that majority of the Group’s existing operations will cease to operate,” it said.

    Genting Hong Kong is part of a bigger conglomerate that also includes Genting Malaysia and Genting Singapore. Among its assets, the conglomerate owns the Resorts World leisure park chain, which includes those in Singapore, New York City, and the United Kingdom. It also has 30 casinos across the U.K.
    The company, controlled by Malaysian tycoon Lim Kok Thay, has been hard hit by the Covid-19 pandemic as travel came to a standstill.
    Trading of Genting Hong Kong shares were suspended on Tuesday, and will remain halted until further notice, said the firm.
    Genting shares in Malaysia and Singapore were still trading on Wednesday. Genting Singapore shares were up 0.64%, and shares in Malaysia were down 1.72%

    Legal battle in Germany

    Genting Hong Kong was in the middle of legal proceedings with a regional government in Germany to drawdown a $88 million backstop facility – or backup funding for a secondary source of repayment – that’s related to MV Werften.
    But in a ruling this week, the German federal state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern rejected Genting’s application to access the $88 million, according to Genting’s filing earlier this week.
    “The Company and the Group have no access to any further liquidity under any of Group’s debt documents and the Company’s available cash balances are expected to run out on or around end of January 2022 according to the Company’s cashflow forecasts,” Genting said Wednesday.

    It said it has applied to the court to appoint provisional liquidators, and has also sought to authorize the liquidators to undertake the firm’s debt restructuring.
    The company reported a $238 million net loss for the period ending June 2021, as compared to a $742.6 loss million for the same period in 2020. Genting Hong Kong halted payments on debts of almost $3.4 billion in 2020, according to news reports.

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    The world is hungry for lithium. Geothermal energy could transform how it's sourced

    Workers remove clay batches while extracting mud from the drilling well at Controlled Thermal Resources’ geothermal energy and lithium plant in California on November 9, 2021.
    Gina Ferazzi | Los Angeles Times | Getty Images

    Around the world, a number of firms are looking to develop facilities focused on direct lithium extraction, or DLE.
    Today, lithium is usually sourced using two methods: open-pit mining or extracting brine from underneath salt flats, or pans.
    Julia Poliscanova, senior director for e-mobility at Transport & Environment, describes lithium as being “irreplaceable for all of our green transitions.”

    The southwest of England is famed for its dramatic coastline, verdant countryside and fresh seafood. If all goes to plan, another string could be added to the region’s bow over the next few years: lithium extraction.
    In the county of Cornwall, efforts are underway to tap into the area’s natural resources and establish an industry which could, one day, produce both renewable energy and establish a local source of lithium.

    Alongside its use in cell phones, computers, tablets and a host of other gadgets synonymous with modern life, lithium is crucial to electric vehicles and battery storage, two technologies with a big role to play in the planet’s shift to a low and zero emission future.
    Examples of how this nascent sector could progress over the next few years include Geothermal Engineering Ltd, a company based near the Cornish town of Redruth specializing in the development and operation of geothermal projects.
    Alongside its planned renewable energy operations, GEL is also working on a trial project centered around the extraction of lithium from geothermal waters. It’s a collaboration with another company, Cornish Lithium, via a joint venture dubbed GeoCubed.
    “The aim is to demonstrate that lithium hydroxide, a key component of lithium-ion batteries used in electric vehicles, can be produced in Cornwall from naturally occurring geothermal water with a net zero carbon footprint,” GEL says.

    Read more about clean energy from CNBC Pro

    The project in Cornwall is focused on direct lithium extraction, or DLE. According to the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory, the technologies behind DLE “can be broadly grouped into three main categories: adsorption using porous materials that enable lithium bonding, ion exchange, and solvent extraction.”While there is excitement about its potential, the NREL cautions it “remains a challenging task” to scale up the above methods to what it calls “full production capability.”

    “For example, developing a solid material that bonds with just lithium is a huge challenge in geothermal brine that contains many minerals and metals,” it says.

    ‘Irreplaceable’ for a green transition

    Projects such as the one in Cornwall come at a time when concerns around sustainability and ESG are mounting. The security of global supply chains is another issue, especially when the vast majority of lithium production is currently dominated by countries including Chile, China, Australia and Argentina.
    Against this backdrop, commercializing less intensive, more local and easily accessible ways of sourcing lithium could be hugely important going forward.
    Major economies and automotive manufacturers are also laying out plans to increase the number of electric vehicles on our roads. Simultaneously, the push to expand renewable energy capacity shows no sign of letting up.
    Julia Poliscanova is senior director for e-mobility at Transport & Environment, a campaign group headquartered in Brussels. Speaking to CNBC, she described lithium as being “irreplaceable for all of our green transitions.”
    When it came to the sustainable sourcing of lithium and other materials, Poliscanova said that, “mid to long term, it’s clear that the vast majority of it has to come from circular business models, most notably recycling.”
    She noted how there would be “really immense growth and demand” over the next few decades. This would require, in the short to medium term, new extraction techniques.
    Expanding on her point, Poliscanova said the majority of lithium that will be in use in 2030 had not been extracted yet.
    “That’s where geothermal lithium comes in,” she said, “because the new lithium, the new resources we … need, it has to be sustainably mined and has to be with the lowest impact on the environment and our communities.”

    ‘How do we get it out?’

    GeoCubed’s £4 million ($5.46 million) pilot plant will focus on a range of direct lithium extraction technologies. The overall objective is to eventually develop a commercial plant at GEL’s United Downs Deep Geothermal Power Project.

    Read more about clean energy from CNBC Pro

    In an interview with CNBC, Ryan Law, GEL’s founder and managing director, outlined the opportunity his business was looking to capitalize on. Beneath its surface, Cornwall is home to a lot of granite rock which in turn has a high lithium content, Law explained.
    “The combination of the granite rock being rich in lithium and hot water — hot water can absorb more lithium — means that the water that we bring to the surface at United Downs to drive our power plant has a very high lithium content,” he said.
    “The next step is: how do we get it out?” Law went on to say. “And that’s what we’ve been looking at in conjunction with a number of partners.”
    Changing times
    GEL is one of several firms looking to develop facilities focused on direct lithium extraction. Alongside GeoCubed, Cornish Lithium is also working on a number of other projects.
    Elsewhere, in April 2021, Australia-listed Vulcan Energy Resources said its direct lithium extraction pilot plant, located in Germany’s Upper Rhine Valley, had started operations.
    In the U.S. in November, a firm called Controlled Thermal Resources announced that its drilling program at the Hell’s Kitchen Lithium and Power project in California had begun.
    At the time, CEO Rod Colwell said the company was “on schedule to deliver the project’s first 50MW of baseload renewable power in late 2023 and an estimated 20,000 tonnes of lithium hydroxide in 2024.”
    The Hell’s Kitchen project is attracting attention from some major players. Last summer, General Motors said it had “agreed to form a strategic investment and commercial collaboration with Controlled Thermal Resources to secure local and low-cost lithium.”
    “As the first investor, GM will have first rights on lithium produced by the first stage of the Hell’s Kitchen project, including an option for a multi-year relationship,” the carmaker later added.

    Sea change

    The above developments are in various stages of progression, but if they are able to produce at scale, it could lead to a sea change in the way lithium is harvested.
    According to the NREL, the majority of lithium is sourced from “open-pit mines or lithium-containing saltwater beneath salt flats.”
    It describes the latter as involving saltwater which contains lithium being “pumped into large basins where it evaporates under the sun.”
    The environmental effects of such processes can be significant. The NREL says both open-pit mining and the salt flats method “can lead to land destruction, potential contamination, and high water consumption, notably in areas already suffering from drought and desertification.” It adds that they also take up a significant amount of space.DLE, by contrast, allows for a “a more sustainable lithium supply, including using geothermal energy as the renewable power source for production.”

    This image shows Geothermal Engineering Ltd’s proof of concept power plant on the United Downs Industrial Estate in Cornwall, England.

    Read more about electric vehicles from CNBC Pro

    Transport & Environment’s Poliscanova went on to stress the importance of geothermal lithium complementing efforts on recycling and ideas about a circular economy. Recycling, she later said, should be the “number one priority.”
    Recycling does indeed look like it will have a key role to play going forward, especially in the EV sector. Elon Musk’s Tesla, for instance, says all of its scrapped lithium-ion batteries are recycled.
    And back in November, Swedish battery firm Northvolt said it had produced its first battery cell with what it described as “100% recycled nickel, manganese and cobalt.”

    Pushing ahead

    Back in Cornwall, the GeoCubed project continues. Earlier this month, it said it had chosen a firm called Ross-shire Engineering to provide its pilot plant with support related to engineering, procurement, construction and commissioning, or EPCC.
    Its statement also referenced an electrical submersible pump test undertaken by GEL in August 2021, which resulted in the collection of “a bulk sample of geothermal water.”
    GeoCubed said the levels of lithium concentrations in the sample were “encouraging,” and added that “other key by-products such as caesium, rubidium and potassium were shown to be at elevated levels.”
    If all goes to plan, the pilot facility will be commissioned by the end of March this year. More