'Please mine more nickel,' Musk urges as Tesla boosts
production
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[July 23, 2020] By
Yilei Sun and Melanie Burton
BEIJING/MELBOURNE (Reuters) - Tesla Inc <TSLA.O>
boss Elon Musk urged miners to produce more nickel, a key ingredient in
the batteries that power the company's electric cars, warning the
current cost of batteries remained a big hurdle to the company's growth.
"Tesla will give you a giant contract for a long period of time if you
mine nickel efficiently and in an environmentally sensitive way," Musk
said on a post-earnings call on Wednesday.
Nickel makes batteries energy dense so cars can run further on a single
charge, and Tesla needs the metal more than ever as it looks to ramp up
production of trucks and solar projects that use a lot of nickel.
Musk's call for greater nickel mining comes even as prices for battery
materials wallow around rock bottom.
However, traders and analysts say the kinds of volumes Tesla would need
are unlikely to make a compelling business case for miners to invest in
increased production, nor are they likely to boost prices in the medium
term.
Tesla currently sources nickel-cobalt-manganese (NCM) batteries from
South Korea's LG Chem Ltd <051910.KS> and nickel-cobalt-aluminium (NCA)
batteries from Japan's Panasonic Corp <6752.T>.
These companies indirectly buy nickel from mining companies in a long
auto supply chain. Tesla doesn't disclose which nickel miners are in its
supply chain.
Given Tesla's focus on sustainability, the company is likely to prefer
to buy from miners of higher-grade nickel sulphide, which requires less
power to process than laterite ore, said Lachlan Shaw of National
Australia Bank.
There are three key suppliers - Brazil's Vale <VALE3.SA>, which operates
in Canada using some hydropower, Russia's Norilsk Nickel <GMKN.MM> and
BHP Group's operations <BHP.AX> in Western Australia. "Vale is in the
box seat," he said.
While electric vehicles consume a much smaller amount of nickel than
traditional industries such as stainless steel makers, EVs are expected
to be the quickest growth market for nickel miners.
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A Tesla car is seen in Los Angeles, California, U.S., July 9, 2020.
REUTERS/Lucy Nicholson/File Photo
Nickel consumption in EV battery materials is expected to soar 64% between 2019
and 2025, research firm Wood Mackensie said, although it added that satisfying
this demand could be challenging for an industry that has been slow to add
capacity in a timely and cost-effective manner.
"He needs nickel, so he hopes nickel prices will go lower and lower," said a
China-based nickel trader. "Prices will not be impacted in the short-term
because the market is in surplus."
Nickel hit a 14-month low of $10,865 a tonne <CMNI3> in March but has since
recovered to $13,180, still down by some 30% from five-year peaks seen in
September. Prices rallied 2.6 percent partly on Tesla's bullish outlook, a
trader said.
Tesla on Wednesday posted a second-quarter profit, but Musk said he would
prioritise growth over profit going forward, and focus on making Tesla vehicles
more affordable.
"The real limitation on Tesla growth is cell production at affordable price.
That's the real limit," Musk said, adding the company would expand its business
with Panasonic <6752.T> and CATL <300750.SZ> and "possibly with others".
Tesla is expected to reveal technological advances at its "Battery Day" event in
September.
(Reporting by Yilei Sun in Beijing and Melanie Burton in Melbourne; Additional
reporting by Mai Nguyen in Singapore and Hyunjoo Jin in Seoul; Editing by
Sayantani Ghosh and Sam Holmes)
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