Nvidia makes the chips. But the metal powering them is where the real money is.

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Nvidia is up over 2,000% in three years.

Everyone knows the AI story. The chips. The GPUs. The trillion-dollar valuations.

But there's a layer underneath the chips that nobody's talking about.

Every AI chip sits in a server. Every server sits in a data center. Every data center runs on electricity. And every data center has a battery backup system made from lithium-ion cells.

You can't run a data center without lithium. It's not optional. It's infrastructure.

Microsoft just announced $80 billion in data center spending for 2026 alone. Amazon is spending $100 billion. Google is close behind. Meta is building a facility in Louisiana the size of a small city.

All of that construction creates demand for one thing at the foundation level: lithium.

The world produces 300,000 tons of lithium a year. Demand is headed to 5.5 million tons by 2040. Even before AI, the gap was unsustainable. Now it's accelerating.

EnergyX just turned on the largest lithium extraction plant in the country. Producing battery-grade lithium. 50,000 tons per year at full scale. Billion-dollar revenue potential.

GM led a $50 million investment. DOE backed them. 47,000 investors committed $171 million. 120+ patents.

Shares are $12. After April 16, the price goes up.

Everyone chased Nvidia after the move. The lithium play is still sitting at $12.

Details here.


This is a paid advertisement for EnergyX's Regulation A+ Offering. Please read the offering circular at invest.energyx.com/. Under Regulation A+, a company has the ability to change its share price by up to 20%, without requalifying the offering with the SEC.

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