We’re talking about national security, economic leverage, and corporate loyalty in an era when raw materials are more strategic than oil. And that changes everything.
Understanding Lithium Americas: A North American Entity with Complex Ties
Lithium Americas Corp. operates primarily out of Vancouver and Reno, with its flagship project located in Thacker Pass, Nevada—a lithium-rich clay deposit sitting on public land managed by the Bureau of Land Management. The company was founded in 2009, went public in Canada, and later listed in New York. Its leadership team, board, and regulatory filings are all rooted in North American governance structures. That said, the ownership structure isn’t as straightforward as a typical U.S. mining firm.
By 2023, Ganfeng Lithium—the massive Chinese battery materials producer—had accumulated a 37% stake in Lithium Americas, making it the single largest shareholder. But ownership doesn’t equal control. Ganfeng doesn’t dictate operations at Thacker Pass. They aren’t on the board. They can’t veto environmental permits or override U.S. safety standards. And that’s a key distinction people don’t think about enough: influence isn’t the same as authority.
Still, the optics are concerning to some. A foreign state-linked entity holding a near-majority in a critical mineral project on U.S. soil? That raises eyebrows in Washington. Yet, Ganfeng’s investment was approved by CFIUS (the Committee on Foreign Investment in the United States), which means, at least officially, the risk was deemed manageable.
The Role of Foreign Investment in U.S. Resource Projects
Foreign capital flows into American mining all the time. Australia’s Pilbara Minerals has stakes in Quebec. Chile’s SQM operates in Arkansas. It’s the global nature of the industry. What makes the Lithium Americas-Ganfeng tie-up different is scale and sector sensitivity. Lithium isn’t just another commodity. It’s embedded in defense tech, grid storage, and the future of transportation. So when a Chinese firm owns 37% of a Nevada lithium project capable of supplying 40,000 tons of lithium carbonate annually, regulators watch closely.
How Corporate Structure Shields U.S. Control
The company maintains operational independence. Day-to-day decisions? Made in Reno. Project financing? Raised through U.S. and Canadian markets. Environmental compliance? Handled by American consultants and audited by federal agencies. Ganfeng has certain rights under shareholder agreements—like first refusal on offtake or participation in expansions—but they can’t unilaterally redirect shipments to China. The lithium produced at Thacker Pass is intended for the North American battery supply chain, including potential customers like GM, Ford, and Tesla.
Chinese Influence vs. Direct Control: Why the Distinction Matters
Let’s be clear about this: just because a company has significant Chinese investment doesn’t make it a Chinese company. Alphabet has investors in Saudi Arabia and Japan—but no one calls it a Middle Eastern or Asian tech giant. The same logic applies here. The thing is, lithium is different. Unlike search engines or social media, it’s a physical resource with geopolitical weight. And that’s where sentiment starts to override nuance.
Ganfeng Lithium isn’t a shadowy arm of Beijing. It’s a publicly traded company listed in Hong Kong and Shenzhen, though it does have historical links to Jiangxi province and benefits from state-backed credit lines. But it also competes with CATL, BYD, and other Chinese firms. It’s not a monolith. It’s a player in a crowded, hyper-competitive market. So while it’s fair to question Chinese influence, painting Ganfeng as a proxy for the CCP oversimplifies a complex reality.
And that’s exactly where critics and supporters diverge. One side sees economic pragmatism: we need capital to build mines, and China has it. The other sees dependency: if tensions rise, could Ganfeng pull funding or block exports? Honestly, it is unclear. No one’s tested that scenario yet.
Ganfeng’s Strategic Interests in North American Lithium
For Ganfeng, investing in Lithium Americas isn’t about controlling U.S. resources—it’s about diversification. China refines 60% of the world’s lithium but sources most of its raw material from Australia, Chile, and Africa. By backing a U.S. project, Ganfeng secures access to a stable, politically vetted supply chain outside its home region. It’s hedging against sanctions, shipping disruptions, or diplomatic fallout. Smart business? Absolutely. Threat to U.S. interests? Not necessarily.
U.S. Policy Responses to Foreign Mineral Investments
In 2022, the Inflation Reduction Act included provisions that bar EVs using batteries with “critical minerals from foreign entities of concern” from receiving tax credits. But the rules have carve-outs. Joint ventures? Sometimes eligible. Projects with strong U.S. labor and sourcing compliance? Often still qualify. Thacker Pass is designed to meet these thresholds. The company is working with union contractors, sourcing steel and concrete locally, and planning for 90% domestic content in lithium production. That could insulate it from future regulatory shifts.
The Global Lithium Race: Where Does Thacker Pass Fit?
To give a sense of scale: the Thacker Pass deposit holds an estimated 16 million tons of lithium carbonate equivalent—enough to power 30 million electric vehicles. That’s roughly 15 years of current U.S. demand at today’s production rates. No other undeveloped lithium project in North America comes close. Compare that to the Silver Peak mine in Nevada (operated by Albemarle), which produces just 5,000 tons annually. Or Quebec’s James Bay project (Sayona Mining), aiming for 22,000 tons by 2026. Thacker Pass is in a different league.
And yet, it’s still not online. Construction started in late 2023 after years of permitting delays, lawsuits from Indigenous tribes, and environmental challenges. The timeline? First production expected by 2026. That’s late—Europe and China are already scaling up. But because the U.S. lacks refining capacity, even when Thacker Pass comes online, much of the concentrate may still be shipped to China for processing. Which explains why some experts argue we’re far from energy independence.
Comparing Major Lithium Projects in the Western Hemisphere
Take Sonora, Mexico: Ganfeng also owns a lithium project there, using clay-based extraction similar to Thacker Pass. But Mexico’s regulatory environment is volatile. President López Obrador nationalized the lithium sector in 2022, freezing private development. As a result, Ganfeng’s Mexican venture is stalled. Contrast that with Nevada—pro-business, stable permitting, close to infrastructure. The U.S. site is far more attractive. Hence, Ganfeng’s patience with Thacker Pass makes sense.
Processing Bottlenecks: The Hidden Dependency on China
Even if Thacker Pass produces 40,000 tons of lithium annually, the U.S. still lacks large-scale conversion facilities to turn spodumene or clay into battery-grade carbonate or hydroxide. There are only two major lithium refiners in North America—Albemarle’s plant in Langbein, Louisiana, and Livent’s facility in North Carolina—combined capacity: under 15,000 tons. That means most raw material will likely go overseas. China controls over 70% of global refining—a chokehold that won’t disappear overnight.
Xiaomi vs Huawei: The False Comparison in Tech vs Mining Nationalism
Some commentators liken Ganfeng’s stake in Lithium Americas to Huawei’s attempted dominance in 5G infrastructure. The comparison doesn’t hold. Huawei was pushing proprietary technology into core telecom networks—something that could enable espionage. A mining investment is different. It’s capital for extraction, not surveillance. Xiaomi sells smartphones in Europe, but no one claims French telecoms are compromised. So why treat mineral equity like digital espionage?
The issue remains: perception drives policy. Because lithium is strategic, even indirect foreign ownership triggers scrutiny. But because the U.S. lacks sufficient private capital to fund billion-dollar mines, it needs outside investment. The question isn’t whether foreign money should be allowed—it’s how to structure deals that protect national interests without killing progress.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does China own Lithium Americas?
No. China does not own Lithium Americas. The company is U.S.-incorporated and independently operated. Ganfeng Lithium, a Chinese firm, holds a 37% minority stake. That gives them influence, not ownership. They can’t appoint directors or override management decisions. The company remains under American control.
Can the U.S. government seize Thacker Pass?
Technically, yes—but only under extreme circumstances. The federal government could invoke eminent domain for national defense, but that’s never been done for a mining project. More likely, regulatory pressure or funding incentives would shape development. Right now, the Department of Energy has offered a $2.26 billion loan to support construction. That kind of financial leverage often matters more than legal threats.
Will lithium from Thacker Pass go to China?
Not directly. The plan is to supply North American battery makers. However, because the U.S. lacks refining capacity, some raw material might be sent to China for processing—then returned as cathode or cell components. That’s a temporary dependency. Several new conversion plants are proposed in Texas and Tennessee, but none are operational yet.
The Bottom Line
Lithium Americas is not a Chinese company. It’s an American project with Chinese capital. There’s a difference. I find this overrated framing—that foreign investment equals foreign control—especially when the alternative is no development at all. We need mines. We lack funding. And global supply chains are, by nature, global.
That said, we can’t ignore the risks. Relying on a Chinese firm for a third of our equity exposure in a strategic mineral project is a gamble. What if U.S.-China relations deteriorate further? What if Ganfeng divests under political pressure? The data is still lacking on how such scenarios would play out.
My recommendation? Double down on building domestic refining. Pass incentives for closed-loop battery recycling. And create sovereign wealth-style funds to take stakes in critical mines—so we don’t have to depend on foreign deep pockets. Because yes, Ganfeng’s involvement makes Thacker Pass possible today. But in ten years, we should be able to fund our own future.
And wouldn’t that be a better outcome for everyone?
