Inspection Of Texas Drainage Ditch Reveals Pipe Discharging Black Liquid From Tesla’s $1 Billion Lithium Refinery

So, you’re walking a drainage ditch on a Tuesday morning, checking for storm debris and erosion like you have for years. Then you spot an industrial pipe you’ve never seen before, pumping dark liquid into the waterway you’re responsible for maintaining. That’s exactly what happened to workers from Nueces County Drainage District No. 2 near Robstown, Texas—and it’s raising uncomfortable questions about what “clean lithium” actually means.

The pipe belonged to Tesla’s nearly $1 billion lithium refinery, a facility Elon Musk has championed as proof that domestic battery material production can be environmentally responsible. Steve Ray, a spokesperson for the drainage district, described the discharge as “very dark and murky”—what he’d “actually call it black.” This wasn’t the clear, benign runoff Tesla had promised from their supposedly acid-free refining process.

Here’s where things get interesting. Tesla holds a valid Texas wastewater permit allowing them to discharge up to 231,000 gallons daily of treated wastewater. When state regulators investigated in February, they found Tesla in full compliance—but only tested for conventional pollutants like dissolved solids and chlorides. Nobody checked for heavy metals or lithium itself…

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