North Louisiana lithium search intensifies, LSU team to canvas Smackover

North Louisiana lithium search intensifies, LSU team to canvas Smackover

Industry reports say the Smackover geologic formation upon which north Louisiana sits may contain enough lithium to power 50 million electric vehicles.

The U.S. Geological Survey says the Arkansas Smackover alone could contain 5.1 million to 19 million metric tons of the material.

The chemical element has been found in the same formation in Northeast Texas, and in Arkansas and Texas there are concentrations high enough to make extraction commercially feasible.

Now, testing efforts are focusing on Louisiana.

Ipsita Gupta, a Ph.D. and associate professor at the LSU Craft & Hawkins Department of Petroleum Engineering, has received a grant to determine exactly what lurks in produced waters from oil and gas fields in Louisiana’s Smackover geologic formation. 

In addition to lithium, the testing will identify 22 different elements and ions, Gupta told The Shreveport-Bossier City Advocate.

“It’ll be chlorine, bromine, lithium, magnesium, calcium bicarbonate, the total dissolved salts, so to speak, that you find in formation waters, subsurface formation waters, or produce waters from oil and gas fields, brines,” Gupta said. 

The $261,000 grant was directed to Gupta from the Idaho National Laboratory/Battelle Energy Alliance, funded by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Geothermal Technologies Office. Collaborators include geochemists, geothermal experts, research scientists and scientific officers from Idaho National Laboratory, the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and the LSU Petroleum Engineering and Oceanography and Coastal Sciences departments.

Though the award was received just days ago, Gupta says work is already underway.

“My plan is to really target from northwest all the way to the northeast, different locations, and I have been reaching out, and our department with the help of Dr. [David] Schechter, who's our chairperson, we've been reaching out to oil and gas operators in north Louisiana for sample collection.”

Gupta is developing a list of possible test sites now.

She will be looking for operators in the Smackover who are willing to donate water samples, and she would appreciate support from north Louisiana operators.

“They don't have to do anything for except to allow us to meet with them and collect the water,” Gupta said. The water will be returned to LSU for analysis, which Gupta says will take several months.

The results of the testing will be shared with the operators.

Gupta is excited at the scope of the testing and happy that a group of petroleum engineering students will be involved and learn the process.

“LSU petroleum engineering is a national leader in petroleum and subsurface energy engineering and advanced science engineering and responsible stewardship of subsurface energy systems,” she says.

Her report will be complete by September 2026.

The state has already begun preparing.

In 2024, Senate Bill 268, authored by state Sen. Stewart Cathey, R-Monroe, gave those who purchase "equipment, machines and other items used in lithium recovery activities" a rebate on the state portion of sales tax paid.

“This project is very important for our state, in my opinion," Gupta said. "My fingers are crossed.”

 

Views: 211

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

I think it will be interesting to  see the viability of the North LA  study on this.   I think it is a developing market that Louisiana needs to be involved with.  

The interest in SW AR and then in E TX was driven by the existing USGS database on elements contained in brine (formation water).  The database was built from tests conducted in the 1970's.  In those samples there were no N LA wells that tested to have lithium concentrations that approached the commercial minimum.  However the SMK lithium brine is variable across the formation.  It is worth the effort to secure more samples.  The potential problem with the LSU project is a limited number of operating SMK wells (111) and how they are spread across the formation in Louisiana from east to west.  For example there are no operating wells in north Caddo Parish.  Considering that Cass County Texas has higher concentrations than SW AR, it would make sense to look to NW Caddo for lithium samples.  The modest budget for the project limits sampling to those operating SMK wells.  In order to achieve a comprehensive study across the range of SMK wells would require re-entering plugged and abandoned wells and the budget is insufficient to accomplish that.

RSS

Support GoHaynesvilleShale.com

Blog Posts

History of GoHaynesvilleShale

The History of GoHaynesvilleShale.com

GoHaynesvilleShale.com (GHS) was launched in 2008 during a pivotal moment in the energy industry, when the Haynesville Shale formation—a massive natural gas reserve lying beneath parts of northwest Louisiana, east Texas, and southwest Arkansas—was beginning to attract national attention. The website was the brainchild of Keith Mauck, a landowner and entrepreneur who recognized a pressing need: landowners in the region had little access to…

Continue

Posted by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher) on May 21, 2025 at 6:00

Not a member? Get our email.

Groups



© 2025   Created by Keith Mauck (Site Publisher).   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service