City
Epaper

China’s lithium projects in Tibet a ‘quiet erosion' of the region's autonomy: Report

By IANS | Updated: November 10, 2025 13:20 IST

New Delhi, Nov 10 China's large-scale lithium production that started in Tibet in 2025, is a "quiet erosion ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Nov 10 China's large-scale lithium production that started in Tibet in 2025, is a "quiet erosion of Tibetan autonomy" as benefits primarily leave the region and "flow eastward" to Mainland China, a new report has stressed.

"The benefits flow eastward, while the costs like ecological degradation, cultural dilution, and increased surveillance are borne by Tibetans," according to the report in European Times.

The major lithium mines in Gerze County and Golmud, Qinghai Province have led to impressive infrastructural development including high-speed railways.

The high-speed rail has attracted tourists and commercial activity to previously isolated regions, it noted.

Moreover, the report maintained that this development "is a scaffold for surveillance, a lattice of control." It has raised concerns regarding ecological damage, cultural erosion, and heightened security measures around the mining sites.

"Facial recognition systems greet travellers at hotel check-ins. Police checkpoints dot the roads. The same trains that bring tourists can just as easily transport troops. The lithium mines themselves are a study in extractive colonialism," according to the report.

It characterised the increase in tourism in Tibet as "ideologically weaponised" because it reframes Tibet as a picturesque frontier of the Chinese nation, erasing its contested history and spiritual depth.

It cautioned that economic projects are transforming social and cultural life, with boutique hotels and tourist amenities redefining Tibet as a picturesque frontier.

“In Gerze County, where nomadic herders once roamed freely, Zangge Mining now operates a 115 km² lithium-boron project approved for 33 years of production... In truth, Tibet is being mined twice, once for its minerals, and again for its meaning," the report said.

It also raised a critical question for electric vehicle (EV) buyers, asking, "At what cost comes this lithium and who gets to decide the future of Tibet?”

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International​US targets alleged manipulation in H-1B system under new rule

LifestyleToday's Horoscope, December 26, 2025: Check Your Zodiac Sign's Predictions, Lucky Numbers and Colours

NationalPM Modi to lead ‘Veer Baal Diwas’ commemoration at Bharat Mandapam today

International​US court rejects speedy trial claim, upholds terror conviction of Pakistani American

InternationalTaiwan detects two Chinese aircraft, six naval vessels, two balloons around nation

International Realted Stories

International​US trade panel probes Pakistani dental exporters

InternationalUS finds Indian capsule makers received subsidies, sets stage for duties

InternationalUS imposes visa bans on ex-EU commissioner, four others; European Commission seeks clarification

InternationalUS Congressman Krishnamoorthi centres Senate bid on economy, accountability (IANS interview)

InternationalIsraeli and German students explore pre-Holocaust history through new digital platform