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02/02/2021

This is how Harmful a Battery can be: Kassel Researchers Further Develop Footprint Method

They are in our cell phones and are supposed to power electromobility: It's hard to imagine everyday life without powerful lithium-ion batteries. However, a new method developed by the Kassel University shows how environmentally harmful the mining of lithium carbonate is - and that it could upset water budgets even more in the future. In the future, the method can create a "water scarcity footprint" for globally traded products. It will also make hotspots of water use visible.

Image: Anna C. Schomberg, Stefan Bringezu & Martina Flörke_CC BY 4.0.

The map shows the distribution of water stress areas on Earth (colored red). The five largest individual contributions to the quantitative water scarcity footprint of a 2 MWh lithium-ion storage system worldwide (together totaling 43 percent) are shown as circles. According to their location, the water consumptions were weighted by the respective water stress factor for this purpose. The size of the circles represents the weighted water consumption in cubic meters on site, and the color of the circles indicates the water stress level (www.nature.com/articles/s43247-020-00080-9).

The water footprint, like the carbon footprint, has become an important tool in assessing anthropogenic environmental impacts. However, water is not equally precious everywhere. The Kassel researchers are further developing the footprint model and assessing how much water is available at a production site and what the consequences of consumption may be: This results in the water scarcity footprint.

Using the production of a lithium-ion storage device as an example, Anna Schomberg and Prof. Dr. Stefan Bringezu from the Center for Environmental Systems Research (CESR) and Prof. Dr.-Ing. Martina Flörke from the Ruhr University Bochum demonstrate how the water scarcity footprint can be comprehensively collected as a life cycle assessment.

In the first step, the scientists classified the risk posed by human water use and defined sub-indicators of the water scarcity footprint. "These two steps create general frameworks that allow any products to be evaluated using LCA, always following the same scheme," explains Anna Schomberg, research associate at CESR. "In the last step, we looked at how we can represent this LCA spatially explicitly." The scientists demonstrate their method using the supply chain of lithium carbonate, which is needed to manufacture the storage device.

The water scarcity footprint of lithium carbonate

Lithium carbonate still comes primarily from Australia, China and Argentina. However, 67 percent of the world's reserves are located in the high Andes in the form of salt-rich groundwater. To extract lithium carbonate, this brine is evaporated, which consumes large quantities of water. This type of extraction may exacerbate regional water shortages in the future.

In the study, the scientists identify brine mining in Chile and China in particular as a hotspot of quantitative water use for lithium-ion storage. In both countries, the likelihood of water scarcity is already high. Therefore, the corresponding water consumptions are weighted with a location-specific factor. This makes water use in Chile and China, where different amounts of water are available in each case and thus the probability of water scarcity is also different, directly comparable. Example Chile: For a lithium storage unit with a capacity of 2 megawatt hours, for which the raw material comes from the Atacama deposits, approximately 5,600 m³ of water are used. Globally, this amounts to 33,155 m³ along the entire production chain of the storage facility.

Another result relates to qualitative water use: the additional volume of water that would theoretically be needed to dilute the global water pollution from the production of the lithium-ion storage device back to a tolerable level amounts to about 23 percent of the annual drinking water demand in Germany. Both points, quantitative and qualitative water use, are included in the concept for determining the water scarcity footprint.

Making water consumption globally comparable

The water scarcity footprint concept described is suitable for evaluating products and spatially identifying critical hotspots along international supply chains. A liter of water consumed in Chile has a greater impact than a liter consumed in Germany due to lower water availability. "Such an approach is urgently needed, especially when assessing new technologies to be used in the Western energy transition, for example, in order to avoid problem shifting from the outset," says Bringezu.

The scientists published their findings in the journal "Communications Earth and Environment" published by Nature.

The article, "Extended life cycle assessment reveals the spatially-explicit water scarcity footprint of a lithium-ion battery storage," can be accessed at this link: www.nature.com/articles/s43247-020-00080-9

DOI: 10.1038/s43247-020-00080-9

Contact:
Prof. Stefan Bringezu
Director
Center for Environmental Systems Research CESR
Kassel University
Wilhelmshöher Allee 47, 34109 Kassel, Germany
phonr.: 0561 804-6115

Anna Christine Schomberg
Research Associate
Center for Environmental Systems Research CESR
Kassel University
Wilhelmshöher Allee 47, 34109 Kassel, Germany
anna.schomberg[at]uni-kassel[dot]de