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The Scramble for Lithium
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Books & the Arts

/ February 23, 2026

The Scramble for Lithium

Thea Riofrancos’s Extraction tells the story of how a rare earth mineral became the focus of a worldwide battle over the future of green energy and, by extension, capitalism.

Casey A. Williams

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A worker holds lithium hydroxide at the Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile (SQM) chemical plant in Antofagasta, Chile, 2024.
(Cristobal Olivares / Bloomberg)

In April 2021, the sheriff of Humboldt County in Nevada asked Mark Pfeifle for advice on how to contain protests in his jurisdiction. Pfeifle was the right man to ask: A former adviser to George W. Bush and a longtime right-wing political operator, Pfeifle had played a key role in discrediting the protesters blocking construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in 2016. Through his firm Off the Record Strategies, he was able to portray the protesters as “out-of-state agitators” intent on using violence and intimidation to stop the project. Humboldt County officials were worried that the protests at a local mine could escalate into a Standing Rock–style “occupation.” The police, the FBI, and private security contractors had already begun surveilling the protesters, including a group of Native American activists called the People of Red Mountain. The authorities hoped Pfeifle could help them prevent an Indigenous-led movement from spoiling another resource bonanza.

Books in review

Extraction: The Frontiers of Green Capitalism

by Thea Riofrancos

Buy this book

Northwestern Nevada, it turns out, has lots and lots of lithium. The Thacker Pass mine in Humboldt County sits on what may be one of the largest lithium reserves in the world: an estimated 14.3 million metric tons spread across 18,000 acres of the McDermitt Caldera. The mine’s owners—the Canadian-based firm Lithium Americas and General Motors—stand to earn nearly $6 billion a year once the mine is up and running. As president, both Donald Trump and Joe Biden had backed the project, providing federal loans and fast-tracked permits as part of a bipartisan effort to expand the domestic production of “critical minerals“—minerals considered essential for national security as the world shifts, haltingly and unevenly, away from fossil fuels. Lithium is a critical component of the batteries that power EVs and store the electricity generated by renewables; it is abundant but difficult to extract profitably. The demand for lithium is expected to grow more than 700 percent by 2050 under the most optimistic decarbonization scenarios compiled by the International Energy Agency, driven largely by exploding EV sales. And …
The Scramble for Lithium Law enforcement shouldn't be political. Log In Email * Password * Remember Me Forgot Your Password? Log In New to The Nation? Subscribe Print subscriber? Activate your online access Skip to content Skip to footer The Scramble for Lithium Magazine Newsletters Subscribe Log In Search Subscribe Donate Magazine Latest Archive Podcasts Newsletters Sections Politics World Economy Culture Books & the Arts The Nation About Events Contact Us Advertise Current Issue Economy / Books & the Arts / February 23, 2026 The Scramble for Lithium Thea Riofrancos’s Extraction tells the story of how a rare earth mineral became the focus of a worldwide battle over the future of green energy and, by extension, capitalism. Casey A. Williams Share Copy Link Facebook X (Twitter) Bluesky Pocket Email Ad Policy A worker holds lithium hydroxide at the Sociedad Quimica y Minera de Chile (SQM) chemical plant in Antofagasta, Chile, 2024. (Cristobal Olivares / Bloomberg) In April 2021, the sheriff of Humboldt County in Nevada asked Mark Pfeifle for advice on how to contain protests in his jurisdiction. Pfeifle was the right man to ask: A former adviser to George W. Bush and a longtime right-wing political operator, Pfeifle had played a key role in discrediting the protesters blocking construction of the Dakota Access Pipeline at the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in 2016. Through his firm Off the Record Strategies, he was able to portray the protesters as “out-of-state agitators” intent on using violence and intimidation to stop the project. Humboldt County officials were worried that the protests at a local mine could escalate into a Standing Rock–style “occupation.” The police, the FBI, and private security contractors had already begun surveilling the protesters, including a group of Native American activists called the People of Red Mountain. The authorities hoped Pfeifle could help them prevent an Indigenous-led movement from spoiling another resource bonanza. Books in review Extraction: The Frontiers of Green Capitalism by Thea Riofrancos Buy this book Northwestern Nevada, it turns out, has lots and lots of lithium. The Thacker Pass mine in Humboldt County sits on what may be one of the largest lithium reserves in the world: an estimated 14.3 million metric tons spread across 18,000 acres of the McDermitt Caldera. The mine’s owners—the Canadian-based firm Lithium Americas and General Motors—stand to earn nearly $6 billion a year once the mine is up and running. As president, both Donald Trump and Joe Biden had backed the project, providing federal loans and fast-tracked permits as part of a bipartisan effort to expand the domestic production of “critical minerals“—minerals considered essential for national security as the world shifts, haltingly and unevenly, away from fossil fuels. Lithium is a critical component of the batteries that power EVs and store the electricity generated by renewables; it is abundant but difficult to extract profitably. The demand for lithium is expected to grow more than 700 percent by 2050 under the most optimistic decarbonization scenarios compiled by the International Energy Agency, driven largely by exploding EV sales. And …
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