Atlantic Lithium Ltd (AIM/ASX: ALL), an Africa-focused lithium
exploration and development company advancing projects in Ghana and
Côte d’Ivoire, has agreed to a proposed $210mn takeover by China’s
Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt Co. Ltd, as consolidation accelerates across
the global battery minerals sector.
The companies said Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt intends to acquire all
issued shares in Atlantic Lithium for $0.25 per share in cash under
a binding scheme implementation deed.
The offer values Atlantic Lithium at approximately $210mn and
represents a strategic move by the Chinese battery materials group
to strengthen its upstream lithium resource exposure in Africa.
'Huayou's proposal acknowledges Ewoyaa as a highly attractive
hard-rock lithium asset capable of serving the growing global
electric vehicle and energy storage markets,' Atlantic Lithium
CEO Keith Muller commented.
The proposed acquisition centres on Atlantic Lithium’s flagship
Ewoyaa lithium project in Ghana, one of the most advanced spodumene
lithium developments in West Africa. The transaction remains
subject to shareholder, regulatory and court approvals, as well as
customary closing conditions.
Ewoyaa is expected to become Ghana’s first lithium-producing
mine and has attracted increasing strategic interest amid rising
long-term demand for battery raw materials used in electric
vehicles and energy storage systems.
Atlantic Lithium has also been expanding exploration activities
across Côte d’Ivoire, where the company holds additional lithium
and pegmatite exploration licences aimed at building a broader
regional portfolio.
Huayou Cobalt, one of China’s major battery materials producers,
has been actively securing lithium, cobalt and nickel assets
globally as Chinese companies seek to strengthen supply chains for
the electric vehicle sector.
“The acquisition of the Ewoyaa project complements our existing
battery metal mining operations in Africa and represents a logical
transaction for Huayou as we continue to build a new energy
materials business,' Huayou chairperson and president Chen
Hongliang commented.
Ghana has been positioning itself as an emerging critical
minerals producer alongside established gold and manganese
operations, with the government increasingly emphasising downstream
processing, local participation and value addition in the mining
sector.
Atlantic Lithium previously secured a mining lease for Ewoyaa
and has been working through permitting, financing and development
arrangements for the project, including infrastructure and export
planning linked to Ghana’s Atlantic coastline.
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