Oil made the 20th century. Lithium makes the 21st.

Share

In 1900, oil was a curiosity. Kerosene lamps and lubricant. Nobody thought it would reshape civilization.

Then the automobile happened. Then the airplane. Then two world wars fought over access to it. Then the entire global economy reorganized itself around the assumption that oil would flow forever.

The families that controlled early oil production — Rockefeller, Getty, the Saudis — became the wealthiest dynasties in human history. Not because oil was interesting. Because everything ran on it and nobody else could supply enough.

Lithium is following the same arc.

Twenty years ago it was a niche material. Ceramics. Medications for bipolar disorder. A footnote in the periodic table.

Then came the smartphone. Then the electric vehicle. Then grid-scale energy storage. Then AI data centers that burn electricity like small cities and need lithium-ion backup to stay alive.

Today, lithium is in your phone, your car, your power grid, your hospital's backup system, and every data center running every AI model you've ever interacted with.

And the world produces a fraction of what it needs. 300,000 tons a year against projected demand of 5.5 million tons by 2040.

The old extraction method is 19th-century technology. Evaporation ponds. Eighteen months per cycle. Thirty percent recovery.

EnergyX replaced it. Their GET-Lit platform extracts lithium in days. 98% recovery. Up to three times the yield. Goldman Sachs compared it to shale fracking.

They just commissioned the largest DLE plant in the country. Producing battery-grade lithium now. 50,000 tons per year at full scale. A billion dollars in projected annual revenue.

GM led their $50 million round and locked in first rights to the output. POSCO, Eni, and the DOE backed them. 120+ patents. 100,000+ acres in Chile.

47,000 investors. $171 million raised. Shares are $12.

After tonight, the price goes up.

The oil barons got rich because they controlled supply when the world realized it needed oil more than anything. The lithium equivalent of that moment is happening right now.

The difference is the oil barons didn't let you invest at $12 a share. 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.

Read more