Plain-English definitions of the key terms used in Lithium Record evidence records, source-freshness registers, and verifier-handoff workflows. Each definition includes a conservative boundary note clarifying what Lithium Record provides and what it does not.
Why plain-English definitions matter for verifiers
Lithium Record uses precise technical language across its evidence records, source-freshness registers, and verifier-handoff workflows. This glossary translates that language into plain English so that procurement teams, sustainability auditors, and regulatory reviewers can interpret record fields accurately without specialist knowledge.
Scope and boundary
Every definition in this glossary includes a boundary note. The boundary note clarifies what Lithium Record provides as a technical record infrastructure layer and what it does not provide, specifically: legal advice, regulatory certification, formal compliance approval, or accredited verification services.
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Term index
Definitions
All defined terms
TERM // SOURCE-FRESHNESS
Source Freshness
A label that shows when the evidence sources linked to a record were last reviewed by the record custodian. It does not mean the underlying source has been independently audited or that its content has changed.
The date on which the record custodian last confirmed that the linked source URLs were reachable and that the cited content matched the record fields. It is a static snapshot date, not a continuous monitoring signal.
A file, URL, or data object stored in the Lithium Record vault and associated with a specific evidence record. Vault evidence is hashed at ingestion and the hash is stored alongside the record for later comparison by a verifier.
A SHA-256 digest computed from the canonical fields of an evidence record at the time of ingestion. The hash allows a verifier to confirm that the stored record has not been altered since it was first written.
The structured process by which Lithium Record transfers a read-only evidence package — including record fields, source URLs, and hash digest — to an accredited third-party verifier for independent review.
A boundary label used throughout Lithium Record to clarify that the platform provides technical record infrastructure and educational compliance materials, not legal advice, regulatory certification, or formal approval of any kind.
One of four thematic groupings of evidence records: EU Battery Regulation, Carbon Footprint, Provenance, and Battery Passport. Each lane is a pillar page that links to its spoke evidence records and is listed in the sitemap.
A single structured page that documents one type of compliance-relevant evidence for lithium producers. Each record includes source URLs, a last-reviewed date, a SHA-256 hash, and a verifier-handoff link.
A digital record required under EU Battery Regulation 2023/1542 for industrial and EV batteries placed on the EU market from 2027. It must contain carbon-footprint data, supply-chain due-diligence information, and material composition details accessible via a QR code.
A structured evidence file documenting the lifecycle carbon emissions associated with a lithium material batch, expressed in kg CO₂e per kg of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE). It includes source LCA data, calculation methodology, and a hash-verified evidence chain.
A structured evidence file documenting the origin, extraction method, processing route, and chain-of-custody for a lithium material batch. It links to OECD due-diligence source files and GPS-context data.
Regulation (EU) 2023/1542 of the European Parliament and of the Council, which establishes sustainability, safety, labelling, and due-diligence requirements for batteries placed on the EU market. Key requirements include carbon-footprint declarations, Battery Passports, and supply-chain due diligence for critical raw materials including lithium.
Lithium Record provides a vault, record, hashing, hosting, indexing, and verifier-handoff layer. It does not certify compliance, issue legal determinations, or replace accredited verification. All definitions in this glossary are provided for educational and operational reference only.
For formal EU Battery Regulation compliance determinations, producers must engage accredited conformity-assessment bodies as required by Regulation (EU) 2023/1542.