BHP, world's largest miner, says 2017 is 'tipping point'
for electric cars
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[September 26, 2017]
By Clara Ferreira-Marques and Gavin Maguire
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - This year looks set
to be the "tipping point" for electric cars, Arnoud Balhuizen, chief
commercial officer at global miner BHP said on Tuesday, with the
impact for raw materials producers to be felt first in the metals
market, and only later in oil.
"In September 2016 we published a blog and we set the question - could
2017 be the year of the electric vehicle revolution?" said Balhuizen, a
company veteran who runs BHP's commercial strategy, procurement and
marketing from Singapore.
"The answer is yes...2017 is the revolution year we have been speaking
about. And copper is the metal of the future."
Europe has begun a dramatic shift away from the internal combustion
engine, although, globally, there are only roughly 1 million electric
cars out of a global fleet of closer to 1.1 billion.
BHP forecasts that could rise to 140 million vehicles by 2035, a
forecast it says is on 'the greener' end.
"The reality is a mid-sized electric vehicle still needs subsidies to
compete... so a lot will depend on batteries, on policy, on
infrastructure," Balhuizen said.
Electric cars are expected to soon cost the same as traditional vehicles
- as early as next year by some estimates. But governments are also
getting on board, with China's subsidies leading the way and Britain
becoming the latest country to announce its all-electric ambitions in
July.
Balhuizen said he expected the electric vehicle boom would be felt - for
producers - first in copper, where supply will struggle to match
increased demand. The world's top mines are aging and there have been no
major discoveries in two decades.
The market, he said, may have underestimated the impact on the red
metal: fully electric vehicles require four times as much copper as cars
that run on combustion engines.
BHP, Balhuizen said, is well-placed, with assets like Escondida and
Spence in Chile, and Olympic Dam in Australia. BHP said last month it
was spending $2.5 billion to extend the life of the Spence mine in
northern Chile by more than 50 years.
For oil, though, the impact of the electric car boom may take longer to
be felt.
Balhuizen said in the nearer term, over the next 10 to 15 years,
improvements in the internal combustion engine will be a more
significant drag on demand.
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BHP's Chief Commercial Officer Arnoud Balhuizen speaks at Reuters
office in Singapore September 26, 2017. REUTERS/Edgar Su
BELT, ROAD
China's efforts to build a new Silk Road are another major factor influencing
commodities demand in the near term, and BHP estimates the impact on steel alone
at 150 million tonnes of new demand, Balhuizen said, mostly to be used in
structures and reinforced concrete. Spending could top $1.3 trillion.
China produced just over 800 million tonnes of steel in 2016.
There is little question Asia requires more spending on infrastructure - the
Asian Development Bank estimates that Asia requires $26 trillion in
infrastructure investment by 2030. Per year, that is more than double current
spending, BHP said.
Belt and Road, as the giant initiative is known, is a "tremendous opportunity",
he said, acknowledging that there was a risk that big slogans may struggle to
translate to profit.
Along with the rest of the commodities universe, BHP has benefited from rising
prices over recent months - copper, for example is close to three-year highs,
boosting cashflows.
The return of growth has not turned BHP away from its push for efficiencies,
Balhuizen said, including with instruments like blockchain, although the focus
remains on easier wins like e-documentation.
But efficiencies will not mean further reducing the portfolio of commodities for
now, he said, brushing off criticism from some investors over BHP's oil assets.
"The diversity of our portfolio does create value. We get better credit ratings,
we get a lower cost of debt," he said, pointing to applications in potash of
techniques honed in oil.
"It is very tangible, very clear."
(Reporting by Clara Ferreira Marques and Gavin Maguire; Editing by Richard
Pullin)
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