Western miners push for higher metals prices to ward off Chinese rivals
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[July 22, 2024] By
Ernest Scheyder and Pratima Desai
SALMON-CHALLIS NATIONAL FOREST, Idaho (Reuters) - The only U.S. cobalt
mine sits fallow in the northern Idaho woods, a mothballed hunk of steel
and dirt that is too expensive for its owner to operate because Chinese
rivals have flooded global markets with cheap supplies of the bluish
metal used in electric vehicle batteries and electronics.
Jervois Global, which dug the mine into the side of a nearly 8,000-foot
(2,400-meter) mountain, watched helplessly last year as cobalt prices
plunged after China's CMOC Group opened the Kisanfu mine in the
Democratic Republic of Congo, pushing global production of the metal to
an all-time high. The Idaho site, which Jervois bought in 2019, was
idled in June 2023 just weeks before it was set to open. More than 250
workers lost their jobs. A skeleton crew now rotates unused rock
crushing equipment weekly to keep it from flattening under its own
weight. "We were straightforward with our staff and told them: 'This is
all about the price of cobalt,'" site manager Matthew Lengerich told
Reuters during a visit to the facility. Jervois says cobalt prices need
to reach at least $20 per pound for the site to open. But prices sat
near $12.17 in July. A similar quandary faces BHP, Albemarle and other
Western mining companies trying to compete with metals produced by
Chinese-linked companies, some of which use coal-generated electricity,
child labor or other practices not meeting the standards set by many
governments and manufacturers. Western miners say their competitors have
inherent cost advantages that enable rapid production expansions even as
prices for cobalt, lithium and nickel have plunged more than a third in
the past 18 months. Operational costs for many of these Western
companies have, as a result, been exceeding what market prices will
cover.
That has fueled growing calls from some policymakers and miners,
including Jervois and Albemarle, for a two-tier pricing system with a
premium for sustainably produced metals, according to interviews with
more than three dozen traders, investors, executives, purchasing agents,
and pricing agencies.
The plan is to charge more for a metal that is produced sustainably,
whether that is through direct transactions or via multiple prices for a
metal listed through futures exchanges, depending on production methods.
For example, there would be one price for standard nickel and another
for green nickel. "Western miners simply can't compete with China, and
China has shown the willingness to drive market prices way, way down,"
said Morgan Bazilian, director of the Payne Institute for Public Policy
at the Colorado School of Mines. Two-tier pricing could radically shift
how metals needed for energy transition have been bought and sold for
centuries yet also reduce market transparency as miners could bypass
metals exchanges to negotiate directly with customers. It could also,
two analysts told Reuters, lead to multiple definitions of what exactly
constitutes "green metal."
'COMMITMENTS HAVE A COST' Industry leaders have pushed for two pricing
structures for several years, but the call for change started gaining
more attention from investors, policymakers and customers last fall as
Western governments grew more concerned about Chinese competition. In
meetings across Washington and Brussels, mining executives have been
pleading with governments for some kind of intervention until two-tiered
pricing is more widely embraced, suggesting that tariffs, supply chain
transparency requirements, or government insurance for mines could be
potential remedies, three industry sources said. U.S. and E.U. officials
have privately expressed sympathy with the mining industry, according to
two of the sources, but have so far been loath to inject themselves into
the mechanics of how prices are set by exchanges and others.
"I don't want to say what the markets should or shouldn't do to ensure
strong ESG practices," said the U.S. State Department's Jose Fernandez,
who oversees a program designed to facilitate metals supply deals. "But
it is true that all of those commitments have a cost."
As a result, mining industry customers such as automakers are in the
uncomfortable position of trying to keep their costs low while
maintaining secure and diverse metals supplies. Some deals are taking
shape, prodded in part by regulations tied to emissions.
The European Union by 2027 will require EV manufacturers to show where
they procure metals and the carbon footprint for their production.
Refusal to comply would mean an EV can't be sold in the region, a step
not yet taken by the United States but one widely seen as the most
aggressive globally to boost supply chain transparency and likely to
fuel premium metals contracts.
In Canada last year, Northern Graphite started successfully demanding a
premium from customers wanting guaranteed North American supplies of the
battery metal. Teck Resources earlier this year started selling a
lightly processed type of copper known as concentrate to Aurubis, a
source with direct knowledge said. The transaction does not rely on
exchange pricing and guarantees Aurubis a steady supply of ESG-compliant
concentrate that it turns into copper for sale to the auto industry.
Teck declined to comment. Aurubis said it sees "the way to a
green-friendly copper industry as a joint task for the entire value
chain, which needs to be honored from the raw material supplier to the
end consumer."
Customers for now do not face a penalty if they do not source
sustainable metals, but they increasingly face a reputational risk. "The
question is really for car companies: Are you OK with something that
might be priced lower or are you willing to pay premiums knowing that
this is sourced sustainably in the correct way?" said Michael Scherb,
CEO of Appian Capital Advisory, a private equity firm that invests in
mining companies.
[to top of second column] |
Josh Kluck, a geologist at Jervois Global holds a flashlight as he
looks for a mineral inside a cobalt mining site operated by Jervois
Global, west of Salmon, Idaho, U.S. May 16, 2024. REUTERS/Carlos
Barria/File Photo
'WEATHER THE STORM'
BHP, the world's largest mining company, said this month it would
suspend operations at its Australia nickel mines due to "the
substantial economic challenges driven by a global oversupply of
nickel."
The move was a blow to a company that had unsuccessfully bet its
customers would be willing to pay a premium for nickel produced in a
country that mines sustainably. BHP warned that nearly two-thirds of
Australia's nickel market is in danger of closing amid low market
prices fueled by a 153% increase in Indonesia's nickel from 2020
through the end of last year due to Huayou Cobalt and others -
production that environmentalists say has partly come by tearing up
the country's vast rainforests.
U.S. officials are encouraging Jakarta to improve the country's
mining standards. Huayou Cobalt did not respond to a request for
comment.
Australia's nickel industry is among the cleanest in the world
largely due to how it handles carbon emissions, according to data
from ESG consultancy Skarn Associates. Nickel processed in Indonesia
emits more than five times the amount of carbon as production in
Australia, the data show, with emissions from China's nickel
industry nearly seven times worse than Australia. Albemarle, the top
global producer of lithium, laid off staff in January amid low
prices caused in part by ramped up production from Yongxing Special
Materials Technology and others in China. "If there isn't an
incentive above current prices, you're not going to get the
investment you need to build the domestic (U.S.) supply chain," said
Eric Norris, who oversees Albemarle's lithium operations.
Fernandez, the U.S. State official, expects rising minerals demand
to offset current "global oversupplies," but acknowledged that
miners, for now, are in a bind.
"We have to find ways to weather the storm," Fernandez said.
TRANSPARENCY Since January, world leaders have taken a range of
steps to offset China's market control.
President Joe Biden imposed tariffs in May on critical minerals
produced in China, saying "(metals) prices are unfairly low because
Chinese companies don't need to worry about a profit."
Jim Chalmers, Australia's treasurer, in February said governments
should consider support for "a differentiated international trading
market for resources produced to higher ESG standards."
Chrystia Freeland, Canada's deputy prime minister, in April said
Ottawa would fight the dumping of critical minerals by China,
Indonesia and others.
The Chinese mission to the United Nations did not respond to a
request for comment. China has in the last year banned exports of
graphite and other metals. Multiple U.S. senators from both parties
have said they are considering legislation to offer price insurance
for metals, similar to a government insurance program for crops,
according to Senate aides. Such a move would guarantee miners a
price for their metals, regardless of market conditions. Automakers
have been moving cautiously as this trend for green pricing premiums
evolves, conscious that consumers are reluctant to pay more for EVs.
General Motors, the largest U.S. automaker, believes critical
minerals should be produced sustainably but does not want to pay a
premium out of concern that it will be unable to compete with
Chinese rivals, according to a source directly involved in the
company's minerals procurement. GM told Reuters it requires
suppliers to comply with high standards, a stance echoed by
Volkswagen, BMW and Stellantis. Tesla and Ford, which is building an
Indonesian nickel processing plant with Huayou Cobalt and PT Vale
Indonesia, did not respond to requests for comment. EXCHANGES The
London Metal Exchange (LME) said it has received "positive market
feedback" regarding its move to price sustainable nickel. Its
partner Metalshub, a German online metals auction platform, sold 144
metric tons of low-carbon nickel in May and plans to publish a
corresponding price when there are more transactions.
Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, a UK-based provider of critical
minerals pricing and data, has launched green metals pricing
contracts, with each price derived from how a mining company adheres
to 79 criterion that Benchmark said reflect high production
standards. "You will not be able to guarantee by any stretch of the
imagination a non-China supply of certain metals unless you're
willing to pay some degree of a premium for that product," said
Benchmark's Daniel Fletcher-Manuel. That's the message that Jervois
has been pushing, unsuccessfully. "Ultimately, ESG has a cost," said
Bryce Crocker, the company's CEO. "It's a worthwhile cost."
(Reporting by Ernest Scheyder in Idaho and Pratima Desai in London;
additional reporting by Melanie Burton, Clara Denina, Carlos Barria
and Divya Rajagopal; editing by Veronica Brown and Claudia Parsons)
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