Reports are emerging of armed skirmishes along the disputed border region of the Lithium Triangle, a high-altitude expanse straddling Chile, Argentina, and Bolivia. Early accounts, unconfirmed by independent monitors, describe exchanges of fire between unmarked military units near the Salar de Atacama depressions. The Andean plateau, home to 70% of the world's known lithium reserves, has long been a strategic flashpoint in the global energy transition.
The critical nature of this metal for battery storage and electric vehicle infrastructure places these mineral fields at the centre of a geopolitical shift. The physical reality is stark: a warming climate demands rapid electrification, and that demands lithium. The nations sitting on these reserves now hold a resource more valuable than oil.
Without a co operative framework, resource competition will accelerate. This is not a prediction; it is thermodynamics applied to geopolitics. The world's net zero targets are now tethered to the stability of these salt flats.
We will follow this story as it develops.








