Australian company named in report on lithium mining in Nevada violating the rights of Indigenous Peoples

An Australian company, Ioneer, is developing one of the lithium mines in Nevada, the Rhyolite Ridge Lithium Project. Canadian company Lithium Americas is also developing one of the mines, the Thacker Pass Lithium Mine.

As global demand for lithium surges, driven by the energy transition and rapid expansion of AI-related data centres, Nevada has become a key extraction hub, holding around 85% of the United States of America’s known lithium reserves.

We’re here to protect Mother Earth: Indigenous Rights and Nevada’s Lithium Boom” focuses on three massive lithium mining projects in Nevada: the Thacker Pass Lithium Mine, which is already under construction; the Nevada North Lithium Project; and the Rhyolite Ridge Lithium Project.

“All states have a duty to ensure that companies registered on their shores respect human rights overseas,” said Ketty Nivyabandi, Secretary General of Amnesty International Canada’s English-speaking section.

“As two of the biggest players in the global mining industry, Canada and Australia have a vital role to play to ensure the energy transition doesn’t trample over the rights and the lives of Indigenous Peoples around the world.”

The new research reveals how Indigenous Peoples’ consent was never sought or obtained for these mines, which affect their ancestral lands, and lay bare an extractive-sector business model that systematically prioritizes speed, scale and profit at the expense of Indigenous Peoples’ rights and the environment.

“The mine is going to destroy our homelands, our way of living.”

Shelley Harjo, a member of the Fort McDermitt Paiute and Shoshone Tribe – impacted by the Thacker Pass mine

“In the race for so-called critical minerals, the current Trump administration is accelerating mining permits while weakening environmental oversight, fast-tracking extraction at the expense of human rights and environmental protections. It reflects political and industry priorities rather than what societies genuinely need. As the lithium boom continues, it’s time for the rights of Indigenous Peoples to be prioritized,” said Alysha Khambay, Amnesty International’s Business and Human Rights researcher.

“Amnesty International’s research shows that mining linked to the energy transition is already driving severe human rights abuses, from the Democratic Republic of Congo to the Philippines – from violations of the right to self-determination to restrictions on ancestral lands, forced displacement and the loss of livelihoods, and pollution that causes significant health harms. This is a global tragedy. Foreign mining companies must respect international human rights standards wherever they operate and irrespective of insufficient domestic laws.”

“We were railroaded”

Mining activities must not harm human rights

“It’s deeply worrying that the US government has failed to respect Indigenous Peoples’ right to give or withhold consent.”

Alysha Khambay, Amnesty International’s Business and Human Rights researcher

Federal and state laws must be urgently reformed

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