Lithium Excise Tax Funding Plan

Disclosure

The County of Imperial Lithium Excise Tax Funding Plan is based solely on estimations and projections and is considered speculative.  While the plan references legal sections that govern the tax amount, as of this writing (August 29, 2024), there are no producers of commercial scale lithium within the County of Imperial.  Caution is advised to any person, group or government agency regarding when or if the revenues described and discussed in this Funding Plan come to fruition. This document should be read in conjunction with SB 125, and any subsequently enacted legislation. Should any inconsistencies arise between this document and any existing or subsequently adopted statutory requirements, the statutory language controls.


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ABOUT THE LITHIUM EXTRACTION EXCISE TAX

SB 125 refers to Senate Bill No. 125 adopted by the California Legislature and approved by the Governor in 2022.  This bill adopted numerous amendments to the California Code, including the Lithium Extraction Tax Law, codified in Revenue and Taxation Code §§ 47000 et seq (statutory references in this document are to the Revenue and Taxation Code unless otherwise specified). In particular, this tax law requires any person who extracts lithium from geothermal fluid, spodumene ore, rock, minerals, clay, or any other naturally occurring substance in this state to pay a lithium extraction excise tax upon each metric ton of extracted lithium carbonate equivalent.


Extraction Tax Rate Overview

Section 47010(a) states that beginning January 1, 2023, a Producer  will be required to pay a lithium extraction excise tax for each metric ton of lithium carbonate equivalent extracted from geothermal fluid, spodumene ore, rock, minerals, clay, or any other naturally occurring substance in this state. The tax schedule is as follows:

Tax Rate per Metric Ton Extracted
Tax Rate per Metric Ton Extracted

20,000 or less

$400

20, 001 to 30, 000

$600

30,001 and over

$800

Lithium and lithium compounds can be extracted in different forms and methods, for this reason, SB 125 uses lithium carbonate equivalent (also known as LCE). All lithium and compounds extracted will be converted to LCE by multiplying the tonnage of lithium and lithium compounds by the appropriate conversion factor:

Tax Rate per Metric Ton Extracted
Tax Rate per Metric Ton Extracted

Lithium (Li)

5.323

Lithium Oxide (Li2O)

2.473

Lithium Chloride (LiCl)

0.871

Lithium Bromide (LiBr)

0.425

Lithium Hydroxide Monohydrate (LiOH.H2O)

0.880

Butyllithium (C4HgLi)

0.576

Lithium Carbonate (Li2CO3)

1.000

SB-125 Distribution
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Salton Sea Restoration Fund

Section 47100(b) requires that 20% of the lithium excise tax is allocated to the Lithium Subaccount within the Salton Sea Restoration Fund created in Fish and Game Code Section 2951, which is managed by the California Natural Resources Agency. As of August 2024, no plan has been released by the State regarding how these funds will be used. Any questions should be directed to the California Director of Fish and Wildlife or the Salton Sea Restoration Fund management team.

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County of Imperial

Section 47100(a)(1) allocates 80% of the lithium tax to be disbursed to the County of Imperial and provides the following direction: “Each county shall establish for deposit of these revenues an account or fund separate from the other accounts and funds of the county.”  Section 47100(a)(2)(A) further provides that: “Of the amount disbursed to the County of Imperial pursuant to this subdivision, the county shall establish a method to distribute an amount not less than 30% of that disbursed amount to the County of Imperial communities that are most directly and indirectly impacted by the lithium extraction activities, including, but not limited to, the following communities:”

County of Imperial 80% Distribution Requirements

“Each county shall establish for deposit of these revenues an account or fund separate from the other accounts and funds of the county…Of the amount disbursed to the County of Imperial pursuant to this subdivision, the county shall establish a method to distribute an amount not less than 30% of that disbursed amount to the County of Imperial communities that are most directly and indirectly impacted by the lithium extraction activities, including, but not limited to, the following communities”

Directly Affected Communities:

Bombay Beach

The City of Brawley

The City of Calipatria

The City of Westmorland

Niland

Indirectly Affected Communities:

Bard

The City of Calexico

Desert Shores

The City of El Centro

Heber

The City of Holtville

The City of Imperial

Ocotillo

Palo Verde

Salton City

Salton Sea Beach

Seeley

Winterhaven

Vista Del Mar