The monthly Cornish Mining Sundowner postings include news of any mining developments down here in Cornwall. As I will be in Cape Town this month I will miss the sundowner, so I am happy to report here of the exciting new development at Cornish Lithium's Trelavour demonstration plant, near St. Austell in East Cornwall, where in a first for the UK, it has started production of refined lithium hydroxide monohydrate (LHM), extracted from zinnwaldite, a lithium containing mica found in the decomposed granite which forms kaolin, and mined in the St. Austell region as china clay. LHM is a key raw material for advanced, high-energy lithium-ion batteries which form the foundations of nearly all modern-day electronics on which we all rely - from electric vehicles (EVs) and smartphones to energy storage and drone technology.
Cornwall is home to the largest lithium deposits in Europe and has enough lithium to power at least 50% of all EVs expected to be produced in the UK by 2030. This announcement marks a major advance in UK industrial capability that will help secure a domestic supply of a key material for UK industry. Currently over 60-70% of the world’s lithium refining takes place in China.
In an end-to-end industrial process, the company is re-purposing a former china clay quarry and, using innovative low-carbon processing technology, producing refined LHM on a single brownfield industrial site at Trelavour. The custom-built facility incorporates all processing stages from crushing and grinding the rock, separation of the lithium-bearing minerals and processing of these minerals to produce a refined lithium hydroxide monohydrate.
Launched only a year ago, the plant uses patented, low-carbon processing technology developed over many years of intensive research and development. In early 2025, Cornish Lithium successfully acquired full intellectual property and associated patents from Australian company Lepidico. The Lepidico process has shown to be highly effective and has now been fully optimised by improvements made at the Demonstration Plant. Cornish Lithium plans to market the technology internationally given the success that has been achieved in recent months. The new technology, incorporated into the demonstration plant operates at atmospheric pressure and at moderate temperature, significantly reducing carbon emissions and helping to set a new sustainability standard in the sector
Following the success of the demonstration plant, Cornish Lithium plans to build a full-scale lithium processing and refining plant with an annual capacity of up to 10,000 tonnes of LHM, which is expected to commence full-scale production in 2029.
Let's not forget, however, that another company in East Cornwall, British Lithium, is also extracting lithium from the decomposed granite at a nearby china clay pit, owned by Imerys, a French multinational company, which, in 2023, acquired an 80% stake in British Lithium. The transaction brought together Imerys’ expertise in mining, R&D and process development capabilities, as well as its lithium mineral resources, with British Lithium’s bespoke technology and state-of-the-art lithium pilot plant, which last year produced battery-grade lithium carbonate.
Lithium carbonate is a major product, the foundation of the lithium industry, but for many high-end EV batteries lithium hydroxide is the preferred precursor, so refining to hydroxide gives access to these higher value battery markets. Cornish Lithium's aim of producing battery-grade lithium hydroxide signals that they are aiming at a more advanced stage of processing and potentially higher margin / higher specification product.
By contrast, British Lithium’s achievement is important, but is at the carbonate stage. The step to hydroxide is one further stage of processing, so in principle Cornish Lithium is one further step along the chain. The fact that Cornish Lithium can produce lithium hydroxide domestically is a “first” in the UK context and by-passing a lithium carbonate stage aligns Cornwall with the trend for high-performance battery chemistries.



















