Gates, Bezos-backed firm gets cash injection to find battery metals
KoBold Metals, a start-up backed by a coalition of billionaires including Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, has raised $192.5 million in its latest financing round, which will allow it to speed up efforts to find new deposits of critical metals needed for batteries and clean energy.
Investors in the Series B funding round for the company
included Sam Altman’s Apollo Projects and Mary Meeker’s Bond Capital as well as
BHP (ASX: BHP) and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board, Canada’s largest
pension fund, two people familiar with the matter told The Wall Street Journal.
Previous backers include big names such as Venture capital
firm Andreessen Horowitz and Breakthrough Energy Ventures.
The Silicon Valley-based firm, founded in November 2018,
plans to use artificial intelligence to create a “Google Maps” of the Earth’s
crust, with a special focus on finding cobalt deposits. It collects and
analyzes multiple streams of data — from old drilling results to satellite
imagery — to better understand where new deposits might be found.
Algorithms applied to the data collected determine the
geological patterns that indicate a potential deposit of lithium and cobalt,
which occurs naturally alongside nickel and copper.
KoBold Metals estimates the world needs to mine more than
$10 trillion of these key metals to meet the expected demand for electric
vehicles (EVs), adding that traditional mining companies are likely to turn to
artificial intelligence (AI) tools to help them along their quest.
KoBold, as its chief executive officer Kurt House has stated
multiple times, does not intend to be a mine operator “ever.”
The company’s quest for battery metals began last year in
Canada, after it acquired rights to an area of about 1,000 square km (386 sq.
miles) in northern Quebec, just south of Glencore’s Raglan nickel mine.
The firm, named after the German word for a goblin that
controls the earth’s minerals, has already gathered publicly available data
from company disclosures and government sources, as well as historical
information from companies it partners with.
These include BHP, the world’s no. 1 miner, Norway’s
state-backed energy company Equinor, and Greenland-focused junior Bluejay
Mining (LON: JAY).
KoBold’s algorithms then crunch the data obtained in search
of geological patterns, which guides its activities and land acquisitions.
The technology can locate resources that may have eluded
more traditionally minded geologists and can help miners decide where to
acquire land and drill, the company has said.
It currently owns about a dozen exploration properties in
places such as Zambia, Quebec, Saskatchewan, Ontario and Western Australia.
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