On July 2 (local time), the US Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) issued a solicitation for a five-year fixed-price contract to procure battery-grade lithium carbonate for the US National Defense Stockpile.
According to the solicitation, the contract covers up to 35,641,599 lbs (approximately 16,167 metric tons) of battery-grade lithium carbonate, with a maximum contract value of US$300 million. Bids will be accepted until July 17, and the contract will be awarded to the technically acceptable offer with the lowest evaluated price. The minimum guaranteed order value is US$1 million.
The procurement schedule indicates that approximately 8.06 million lbs (around 3,657 tonnes) will be purchased during the first contract year, gradually declining to approximately 6.26 million lbs (around 2,839 tonnes) in the fifth year. The product must be powdered battery-grade lithium carbonate with a minimum purity of 99.5%, delivered to DLA warehouses located in New York, Nevada, Indiana, or Ohio.
The procurement forms part of the US National Defense Stockpile program, aiming to strengthen strategic reserves of critical minerals and enhance supply chain resilience for national defense and critical industries. The five-year contract also underscores the US government's continued efforts to reinforce the security of its critical mineral supply chain.
SMM will continue to monitor the tender process and subsequent contract awards.
SMM Analysis
Key Takeaway: This is more of a strategic policy signal than a demand shock for the lithium market.
Rather than representing a sudden increase in commercial lithium demand, the tender demonstrates that the United States is moving from policy planning to the actual implementation of its critical mineral stockpiling strategy.
The DLA Strategic Materials office is responsible for managing the US National Defense Stockpile, which serves national security purposes rather than commercial inventory management. Earlier this year, in March, the DLA had already issued a Request for Information (RFI) regarding the potential procurement of approximately 550 tonnes of lithium carbonate, indicating that lithium stockpiling has become part of a broader expansion of the US critical mineral reserve system rather than an isolated initiative.
Limited Impact on Global Supply-Demand Fundamentals
The announced procurement totals approximately 16,200 tonnes over five years, averaging roughly 3,200 tonnes per year (LCE).
Compared with global lithium consumption, this volume remains relatively small and is significantly outweighed by fluctuations in EV and energy storage demand. Consequently, the procurement is unlikely to materially alter the global supply-demand balance or fundamentally change lithium market dynamics in the near term.
Instead, it should be viewed as a long-term strategic procurement program, with limited direct impact on spot market fundamentals.
Procurement Strategy Prioritizes Supply Security
Based on the announced ceiling value of US$300 million, the implied maximum procurement price is approximately US$18,600 per tonne, or roughly RMB 134,000 per tonne.
While this figure does not represent the actual transaction price, it suggests that the US government places greater emphasis on security of supply, supplier qualification, and long-term delivery reliability, rather than simply sourcing at the lowest spot price available in Asia.
Should the final contract prices exceed prevailing Asian market prices, the procurement could effectively create a policy premium for qualified suppliers.
Supply Chain Implications
Although the required product specification—battery-grade lithium carbonate with a purity of at least 99.5%—is relatively standard, participation requires suppliers to satisfy government procurement requirements, demonstrate reliable delivery capability, and comply with US procurement regulations.
As a result, the tender is expected to favor North American producers, as well as qualified suppliers from Australia, South America, and other "friend-shoring" jurisdictions, rather than traditional spot-market traders.
Market Implications
SMM believes the impact can be assessed across three dimensions.
1. Limited Near-Term Price Impact
The procurement schedule translates into roughly 200–300 tonnes per month, which is insignificant relative to China's monthly lithium salt production, cathode manufacturing, and downstream battery demand.
Therefore, the procurement alone is unlikely to change the short-term direction of lithium carbonate prices.
2. Positive Sentiment Effect
At current low lithium price levels, government stockpiling reinforces the narrative that lithium is evolving from a purely commercial commodity into a strategic resource.
Although the direct demand impact is modest, the announcement could provide short-term support to market sentiment, particularly when oversupply expectations have already been largely priced in.
3. Long-Term Strategic Repricing
If the United States continues supporting domestic and allied lithium supply through the DLA, the Defense Production Act, critical mineral incentives, government loans, and long-term procurement contracts, a parallel strategic procurement market may gradually emerge.
Such demand may remain relatively small in volume but could command stronger pricing and place greater emphasis on supply security, ESG compliance, traceability, and geopolitical alignment.
SMM View
The significance of this announcement lies more in its policy implications than its immediate demand impact.
In the short term, the procurement is unlikely to materially affect lithium carbonate supply-demand fundamentals or spot prices. However, over the longer term, the inclusion of lithium within the US national defense stockpile further highlights its strategic importance and may provide stronger policy support for North American and allied lithium projects.
Lesley Yang
New Energy Analyst
Shanghai Metals Market (SMM)
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