El Ciudadano
Original article: Informe documenta una serie de irregularidades y favoritismo hacia SQM en su expansión en la industria del litio en Chile
The Terram Foundation has published a comprehensive document titled «SQM: Genesis of Mining Corruption in Chile». This analysis reviews over four decades of the company’s operations in the country and details the main forms of political and state capture associated with its expansion in the lithium industry. The study identifies systematic practices that have allowed SQM to influence regulatory decisions, weaken institutional control mechanisms, and consolidate a dominant position in the extraction of the mineral from the Salar de Atacama.
The report, authored by researcher Pablo Madrid, examines historical background, legal processes, legislative modifications, and tax conflicts, aiming to provide evidence to promote better governance in the lithium industry that is transparent, environmentally responsible, and free from undue influences.
The document reveals that SQM has directly intervened in the formulation of tax and environmental regulations, modifying legislative proposals for its own benefit. Notable examples include:
These actions, supported by irregular political financing mechanisms—such as ideologically false invoices or indirect payments—allowed SQM to influence environmental and fiscal regulations in favor of its own interests, thus undermining institutional transparency and eroding public trust in the management of the country’s strategic resources.
SQM controls a substantial portion of mining rights and extraction quotas in the Salar de Atacama and its surroundings (approximately 258,440 hectares), despite having recorded significant contractual violations.
The Terram report documents:
| Source: Own elaboration based on data from Sernageomin (2024), Conadi (2024), MMA (2024), and Consulting DCA. |
According to Pablo Madrid, the document’s author, «these findings demonstrate favoritism and preferential treatment that has reinforced SQM’s dominant position, perpetuating its control of the national and global lithium industry despite various violations and undue influences.»
The report also analyzes the Partnership Agreement between Codelco and SQM (2024), one of the most controversial milestones in the National Lithium Strategy.
Among the irregularities observed by Terram are:
The Terram Foundation states that this process «reproduces risks of state capture and undermines the possibility of building a modern, transparent governance structure with citizen control.»
The revenue from lithium exploitation represents one of the main areas of institutional vulnerability and, therefore, a risk of corruption. The study identifies two critical areas where significant risks persist:
Madrid asserts that «these controversies reflect structural problems in oversight and transparency that facilitate evasion, demonstrating that there are still significant gaps in the oversight and fiscal transparency of lithium, which, if not systematically addressed, will continue to generate spaces for disputes and actions affecting public trust.»
Urgent Recommendations to Strengthen Lithium Governance
Terram Foundation proposes a set of recommendations aimed at raising integrity standards, preventing new capture opportunities, and strengthening public oversight. Among these are:
La entrada Report Reveals Irregularities and Favoritism Towards SQM in Lithium Industry Expansion in Chile se publicó primero en El Ciudadano.
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