Palladium – MINING.COM https://www.mining.com No 1 source of global mining news and opinion Mon, 28 Oct 2024 16:22:22 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.4.5 https://www.mining.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/08/cropped-favicon-512x512-1-32x32.png Palladium – MINING.COM https://www.mining.com 32 32 Nornickel raises 2024 production guidance for all metals https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-raises-2024-production-guidance-for-all-metals/ https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-raises-2024-production-guidance-for-all-metals/#respond Mon, 28 Oct 2024 11:11:14 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1164183 Russia’s Nornickel, the world’s largest producer of palladium and a major producer of refined nickel, has raised its 2024 production guidance for all metals.

The company said on Monday that its full-year nickel production forecast was now at 196,000-204,000 metric tons, up from 184,000-194,000 tons previously. The new target was still below the 209,000 tons produced in 2023.

The company said it had produced 146,210 tons of nickel in the first nine months of the year as the furnace at its flagship Nadezhda smelter went back into operation after major repairs in August.

As a result, the company reported a 16% quarter-on-quarter increase in nickel output in the third quarter.

Its palladium production guidance was increased to between 2.624 million and 2.728 million ounces, up from 2.296 million to 2.451 million ounces previously. Palladium output was up 1% year on year at 2.156 million ounces in the nine months of 2024.

Nornickel’s operations director Alexander Popov said the company increased nine-month copper and palladium output year on year while platinum and nickel were unchanged.

The “positive dynamics” were attributed to improved operational efficiency and increase mined ore, he said in a statement.

Nornickel is not subject to direct Western sanctions, though sanctions against Moscow have prompted some Western producers to avoid buying Russian metal and complicated payments, leading Nornickel to redirect sales to Asia.

(By Anastasia Lyrchikova and Gleb Bryanski; Editing by David Goodman)

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Palladium price jumps after US suggests sanctions on Russian exports https://www.mining.com/web/palladium-price-jumps-after-us-suggests-sanctions-on-russian-exports/ https://www.mining.com/web/palladium-price-jumps-after-us-suggests-sanctions-on-russian-exports/#respond Thu, 24 Oct 2024 15:15:32 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163975 Palladium surged as much as 9.5% after the US asked the Group of Seven allies to consider sanctions on Russian exports of the precious metal.

The Biden administration floated the potential restrictions at a meeting of G-7 finance officials in Washington this week as it mulls fresh ways to squeeze President Vladimir Putin’s war efforts. Russia’s MMC Norilsk Nickel PJSC is the biggest producer of palladium, which is mainly used in catalytic converters for automobiles. Norilsk Nickel’s press service declined to comment.

While Norilsk Nickel accounts for around 40% of global output, the company now sells most of its output to China, according to a person familiar with situation. It still sells some to the US, as no import ban for the metal is currently in place, the person said.

Still, sanctions risks “have reignited buying activity,” said Daniel Ghali, senior commodity strategist at TD Securities. Commodity trading advisor trend followers are adding to their palladium bullish positions, he said. “Fear is the trade.”

Shares of the four biggest palladium producers in South Africa — the world’s second-largest source of the metal — all jumped by more than 10%. One of them, Sibanye Stillwater Ltd., recently announced cuts to palladium output at its US mines due to weak prices.

Palladium has fallen about 37% since the start of last year and almost two-thirds from a March 2022 peak, which miners attribute to a subdued global economy and destocking by manufacturers.

The possibility of removing Russian palladium from the market may tighten the market as “South Africa and the other major producers won’t be able to fill the gap,” said Dan Smith, head of research at Amalgamated Metal Trading.

Gold pared gains after latest data pointed to economic resilience in the US, reinforcing bets that the Federal Reserve may take a measured approach to monetary easing. Rising yields and higher borrowing costs tend to weigh on gold, as the metal doesn’t pay interest.

Palladium rose 5.1% at $1,119.88 an ounce as of 10:38 a.m. in New York. Gold gained 0.3% at $2,723.98 after earlier rising by as much as 1%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was down 0.1%. Silver slid while platinum advanced.

(By William Clowes and Yvonne Yue Li)

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Anglo American copper, diamond output down in Q3, 2024 guidance unchanged https://www.mining.com/web/anglo-american-copper-diamond-output-down-2024-guidance-unchanged/ https://www.mining.com/web/anglo-american-copper-diamond-output-down-2024-guidance-unchanged/#respond Thu, 24 Oct 2024 10:56:11 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163946 Global miner Anglo American on Thursday posted double-digit falls in its third-quarter copper and diamond production but maintained its 2024 guidance for the commodities.

Anglo said its copper output fell 13% in the July to September quarter, while rough diamond production decreased by 25% on cuts due to prolonged lower demand.

Its De Beers diamonds unit is exploring options for further output cuts in future, Anglo said.

For the first nine months of 2024, copper output fell 4% to 575,000 tons and diamond production was down 21% at 18.9 million carats.

Anglo still expects to produce 730,000-790,000 tons of copper and 23-26 million carats of rough diamonds this year, even as it assesses additional production cuts going forward.

Its shares, which have risen around 18% this year, opened up 2.2%.

The mining giant is restructuring its business to mainly focus on energy transition metal copper after fending off a $49 billion takeover offer from bigger rival BHP Group in May.

Copper will make up 60% of Anglo’s business after it sells its Australian steelmaking coal assets and nickel mines in Brazil, as well as divesting De Beers and its platinum business Amplats in South Africa.

Apart from its copper assets in Chile, Anglo will also retain iron ore mines in South Africa and Brazil, as well as the Woodsmith fertilizer project in the United Kingdom, which it has now slowed down.

Anglo said steelmaking coal’s production fell by 6% in the third quarter after shutting its Grosvenor mine in Queensland due to an underground fire.

The London-listed miner, the world’s third-largest exporter of metallurgical coal, lowered its yearly production guidance to 14-15.5 million tons from a previous forecast of 15-17 million.

Anglo said the final round of bidders for the coal assets was in place and it expected to announce the sale agreement within months.

(By Clara Denina and Felix Njini; Editing by Stephen Coates and Mark Potter)

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Sibanye’s Montana woes underscore miners’ growing reliance on Washington https://www.mining.com/web/sibanyes-montana-woes-underscore-miners-growing-reliance-on-washington/ https://www.mining.com/web/sibanyes-montana-woes-underscore-miners-growing-reliance-on-washington/#respond Wed, 23 Oct 2024 22:40:17 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163936 US mining projects are growing reliant on Washington’s financial support to offset global competition, a reality underscored by Sibanye Stillwater’s decision last month to lay off hundreds of Montana miners after it failed to qualify for an obscure tax credit tied to the Inflation Reduction Act.

Sliding prices for several critical minerals this year – in part due to overproduction in China, Russia and elsewhere – have put the traditionally conservative US mining companies in the unusual position of seeking Washington’s help to survive, a reliance that helps link their corporate fates to American government decisions.

US industrial policy has shifted in recent years to more fully embrace tariffs, tax credits and other financial tools that directly inject government dollars into critical sectors, including through the IRA, the CHIPS Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law, among others.

“One of the biggest challenges we have in mining in America – setting aside permitting – is that mines here are just not commercially competitive,” said Gracelin Baskaran, director of the critical minerals security program at the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

A fight over government largesse shows how much the stakes have changed for US mines as overseas rivals have expanded market control.

South African miner Sibanye’s Stillwater palladium mine, located roughly 40 miles (64 km) from Montana’s border with Wyoming, last year lost nearly $600 on every ounce it mined, or roughly $269 million, as Russian rivals boosted production at safety standards below what is acceptable in the US Palladium prices fell 40% in 2023.

The mine’s loss, executives said, would have been lessened by a little-known tax credit provision of the IRA known as 45X, which reimburses 10% of production costs. That, they said, could have helped save some of the roughly 800 jobs slated to be cut next month, with the fate of the entire mine uncertain.

The US Treasury Department issued draft rules last year saying the 45X credit does not apply to mining but rather final processing of a mineral.

The draft rule was seen as a strict interpretation of the IRA’s language and meant to appease conservationists and environmental groups, although the United Steelworkers and other labor unions have called for the 45X provision to apply to mining.

While miners lobbied behind the scenes for months, the draft rule appears on track to be finalized in coming days, analysts said. The Treasury Department said it expects to issue final draft rules soon.

Sibanye estimates its costs for labor, electricity and related areas have increased 30% since 2020, part of the reason why it is cutting staff now but did not when prices for palladium – used to make semiconductors, among other goods – were near similar levels in 2018.

“It’s very hard to compete when Russia is selling the exact same product,” said Heather McDowell, a Sibanye executive. “We believe Congress intended for the tax credit to incentivize those of us who produce critical minerals the right way, in this country.”

Other US mining projects have pushed for Washington to support two-tiers of metals pricing, stop negotiations with Indonesia and other minerals-rich countries using controversial mining practices, and forcing government contractors to buy American-produced minerals.

That shift in US industrial policy in a way paradoxically reflects steps that China has already taken, said George Cheveley of Ninety One, a London-based asset manager with investments across the mining sector.

“If you look at the way the US and China are approaching the energy transition, they’re actually doing it the same way,” said Cheveley. “Their view is, ‘We will subsidize the industry to get it up to scale and then we’ll have a profitable, functioning industry with the latest technology.'”

Election ramifications

The 45X issue has now worked its way into control of the US Senate. Montana Senator Jon Tester, a Democrat facing a tough re-election race next month, said little about 45X when the draft rules were issued, but in the wake of Sibanye’s layoffs, has gone public with calls for the credit to cover mining and has lobbied Treasury officials.

Mining is the highest-paying industry in Montana, with an average annual wage of $98,000, 81% higher than the state’s average.

Tester has called the layoffs “unacceptable,” blamed Russia and asked the Treasury Department to expand the 45X credit to mining.

“This mine is a big deal for local economies and our national security,” Tester, a farmer by profession, said in an emailed statement to Reuters.

Tester’s Republican opponent, businessman Tim Sheehy, has blamed what he sees as Democrats’ “job-killing, climate cult agenda” for the job losses in recent public statements. Sheehy’s campaign did not respond to requests for comment.

Polls show Tester trailing Sheehy, although the race remains tight and the winner could help determine control of the Senate given close races elsewhere in the country.

(By Ernest Scheyder; Editing by Veronica and Marguerita Choy)

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US asks G-7 to consider sanctions on Russian palladium, titanium https://www.mining.com/web/us-asks-g-7-to-consider-sanctions-on-russian-palladium-titanium/ https://www.mining.com/web/us-asks-g-7-to-consider-sanctions-on-russian-palladium-titanium/#respond Wed, 23 Oct 2024 21:52:40 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163932 The US asked Group of Seven allies to consider sanctions on Russian palladium and titanium, a person familiar with the matter said, as the Biden administration mulls fresh ways to squeeze President Vladimir Putin’s war machine.

Biden administration officials floated the possibility during a meeting of G-7 deputy finance ministers on Tuesday in Washington, according to the person, who asked not to be identified discussing a private discussion. Finance officials from around the world have gathered in the US capital for annual meetings of the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank.

The US raised the idea to spur conversation about further choking off the Russian economy almost three years after Putin’s forces invaded Ukraine, the person said.

Palladium is a key ingredient in computer chips and in catalytic converters for automobiles, while titanium has uses from airplanes to medical implants.

One major challenge is that Europe is reliant on the metals and has shown little appetite to target them in the past. G-7 members Germany, France and Italy would also need the backing of the other 24 members of the European Union for such sanctions.

The US has already blacklisted Russian titanium, but the metals are key inputs for everything from catalytic converters to semiconductors to airplanes, and western governments have been wary of cutting off supplies for fear of roiling global markets and disrupting their own supply chains.

The Treasury Department declined to comment.

Western nations have long struggled with their approach to metals sanctions on Russia. The price of palladium rose as much as 12% in December on speculation the metal could be next in line for restrictions after the UK issued sanctions on purchases of certain Russian metals. Earlier this year, the US and UK imposed restrictions on trading Russian aluminum, copper and nickel.

Sanctioning titanium would also provide a combative response to a recent proposal by Putin. In September, he suggested his government should think about limiting exports of some commodities such as nickel, titanium and uranium in retaliation for western sanctions after ensuring that it wouldn’t hurt Russia.

The US still buys Russian palladium. Russian company Norilsk Nickel represents about 40% of global output, a share of the market that would be hard to replace quickly.

For the European Union, supplies of both metals from Russia are critical, especially for titanium used in aviation. Putin has asked his government to consider limiting exports of titanium, which could drive prices up and hurt European airplane manufacturers such as Airbus.

(By Daniel Flatley)

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Gold price climbs to a fresh record as geopolitics drive haven demand https://www.mining.com/web/gold-price-climbs-to-a-fresh-record-as-geopolitics-drive-haven-demand/ https://www.mining.com/web/gold-price-climbs-to-a-fresh-record-as-geopolitics-drive-haven-demand/#respond Tue, 22 Oct 2024 21:07:30 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163798 Gold climbed to a fresh record as the approaching US election and conflict in the Middle East boosted haven demand.

Bullion hit an all-time high of $2,748.36 an ounce, topping Monday’s record. Traders have flocked to the market amid a tight US presidential vote and persistent concern that violence in the Middle East may escalate into a wider war. The sentiment spilled over to the silver market, with prices of the white metal climbing for its sixth-straight session to within striking distance of $35 an ounce.

Robust central-bank buying and expectations of US interest-rate cuts have also underpinned gold’s 33% run this year. Federal Reserve officials continue to opine on the path forward, with Jeffrey Schmid favoring a slower pace of rate reductions and Mary Daly forecasting more cuts.

“Haven demand amid heightened geopolitical risks, as well as uncertainty ahead of the US election in November, have also supported gold’s record-breaking rally,” ING Bank NV wrote in a note.

While the outcome of the US election remains uncertain, Saxo Bank A/S Head of Commodity Strategy Ole Hansen suggests gold and silver are getting caught up in bets of a Republican victory.

Meanwhile, money managers have increased net-long positions in gold, while investors have added to holdings in exchange-traded funds. Citigroup Inc. analysts boosted their three-month price forecast by 3.7% to $2,800 an ounce amid expectations that further labor-market deterioration will drive demand.

Spot gold rose 1% to $2,746.41 an ounce at 2:01 p.m. in New York. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed. Palladium, platinum and silver all gained.

(By Jack Wittels and Yvonne Yue Li)


Graphic: Gold’s allure spreads as bulls lock in on fresh records

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Column: Electric vehicles prove a bumpy ride for battery metals https://www.mining.com/web/column-electric-vehicles-prove-a-bumpy-ride-for-battery-metals/ https://www.mining.com/web/column-electric-vehicles-prove-a-bumpy-ride-for-battery-metals/#respond Tue, 22 Oct 2024 16:30:48 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163733 Electric vehicles (EVs) were supposed to supercharge demand for metals such as lithium, nickel and cobalt.

Yet prices for all three EV battery inputs have fallen to such bombed-out levels that producers are curtailing output and deferring new projects.

This is partly a problem of oversupply. Explosive price rallies in 2021 and 2022 resulted in too much new production capacity being brought online too quickly.

But it is also a problem of demand.

The transition away from the internal combustion engine has by no means ground to a halt. Global new energy vehicle sales were up by 20% year-on-year in January-August, according to consultancy Rho Motion.

Rather, the mix of vehicles being sold and the evolution of battery chemistry have dramatically changed the metals demand dynamic.

Lithium, cobalt and nickel prices
Lithium, cobalt and nickel prices

The rise of the hybrids

Pure battery electric vehicle (BEV) sales have underperformed expectations due to buyers’ concerns about limited driving range and charging infrastructure.

By contrast, hybrid and plug-in hybrid cars, which have both a battery and internal combustion engine, have soared in popularity.

The increase in global sales of BEVs slowed to 10% year-on-year in the first eight months of 2024, while plug-in hybrid (PHEV) sales jumped 46%, according to Rho Motion.

This trend has been led by China, the world’s largest EV market. The key driver is the emergence of the extended range electric vehicle (EREV), a type of PHEV that uses the gasoline engine solely to charge the battery, giving the vehicle an extended driving range of more than 1,000 kilometres (621 miles).

EREVs now account for 31% of all plug-in hybrid sales in China, according to research house Adamas Intelligence, which expects them to enjoy similar success in both Europe and the United States.

Major automakers are embracing hybrids in all forms as a relatively low-cost transition technology between gasoline and pure electric vehicles.

Hybrids don’t need the same battery power as a BEV. Adamas calculates that battery pack capacity in a PHEV is a third of that in a BEV, which means a similar-sized reduction in the amount of lithium, nickel and cobalt used per vehicle.

Other metals, however, stand to benefit from the rise of the hybrids. Platinum and palladium, which are used to clean auto exhausts, have been granted an unexpected new lease of life.

Changing chemistry

While the new energy vehicle mix is changing, so too is battery chemistry.

Lithium-iron-phosphate batteries (LFP) have become the rising stars of the battery industry, accounting for around 40% of battery demand in 2023, more than double the share recorded in 2020, according to the International Energy Agency (IEA).

As with the new extended range hybrids, the LFP revolution is being led by China, where two-thirds of EV sales used this technology in 2023, the IEA estimates.

Chinese battery makers have turned what was once regarded as a low-power technology suitable only for short city commutes into a product that can compete with nickel-manganese-cobalt battery chemistries.

China’s CATL unveiled a new break-through LFP battery at the Beijing auto show in April. The Shenxing Plus boasts a driving range of 1,000 kilometres on a single charge, effectively eliminating range anxiety.

The only critical metal input for an LFP battery is lithium. It doesn’t require either nickel or cobalt, which makes an LFP battery both cheaper and more environmentally friendly than other chemistries.

The market has taken note. Demand forecasts for nickel and cobalt use in batteries have been steadily downgraded over the last year to factor in China’s pivot towards LFP technology.

Going global

European and US automakers have until now stuck with high-nickel chemistries in their EV batteries but that may be starting to change.

Both Ford Motor and General Motors have shown interest in using CATL’s LFP technology.

Moreover, while China has been the only mass-producer of LFP batteries since the 2010s, the core patents that enabled this dominance expired in 2022.

This has sparked interest outside China.

For example, the IEA has noted a surge of LFP investment in Morocco, which is home to the world’s largest phosphate reserves. Importantly, it also holds free-trade agreements with both the European Union and the United States.

A twisting road

Li Auto’s L6 family sports utility vehicle is an example of how hybrid and LFP technologies have come together to upset preconceived notions about the EV market.

Boasting what the company calls “the latest generation of lithium-iron-phosphate battery”, the vehicle has a range of 212 kilometres in pure battery mode and a range of 1,390 kilometres in mixed battery-engine mode.

The Li6 can accelerate from zero to 100 kilometres an hour in 5.4 seconds, which lays to rest any fear that LFP batteries can’t deliver the same performance as nickel-rich batteries.

Such products are good news for the broader energy transition, offering consumers a cheap, reliable alternative route to an all-electric future.

But they challenge the idea that the global auto market will jump straight from the internal combustion engine to a pure battery vehicle.

They also defy expectations that all EV batteries need nickel and cobalt to enhance power and performance.

What’s more, the battery revolution has only just begun. Battery makers are investing heavily in research and development with the goal of developing ever cheaper, more powerful batteries.

Even lithium is at risk of substitution from sodium-ion batteries as CATL and other Chinese companies such as BYD expand capacity for the new technology.

Sodium-ion batteries could cost up to 20% less than incumbent technologies and can be used for both stationary storage and compact urban EVs, according to the IEA.

They use no lithium but, depending on chemistry, need both nickel and manganese, which foreshadows the potential for more metallic twists in the unpredictable electric vehicle revolution.

(The opinions expressed here are those of the author, Andy Home, a columnist for Reuters.)

(Editing by Louise Heavens)

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How resource ‘classification debt’ chips away at miners’ growth and investor trust https://www.mining.com/how-resource-debt-chips-away-at-miners-growth-and-investor-trust/ https://www.mining.com/how-resource-debt-chips-away-at-miners-growth-and-investor-trust/#respond Fri, 18 Oct 2024 21:00:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1163518 Over the past decade, resource misclassification has saddled the mining industry with a costly problem. It’s one Guy Desharnais, Osisko Gold Royalties’ (TSX: OR; NYSE: OR) vice-president for project evaluation, calls “classification debt.”

Explorers and developers often overstate the certainty of mineral resource classifications based on inadequate data, Desharnais said at an event in Vancouver on Wednesday. The practice has in some instances led to unexpected analyst downgrades, soaring costs and debt, and the derailment of promising assets.

“That classification debt, unfortunately, needs to get paid,” he told about 430 conference participants from 21 countries at CIM’s first Mineral Resources & Mineral Reserves conference. “The CEO may be walking around with a 3-million-oz. resource estimate, but they haven’t earned that classification with sufficient drilling. When the debt comes due, it’s often through painful reclassifications and revisions.”

Decade of missteps

Several recent projects have demonstrated the high cost of classification debt.

Rubicon Resources’ catastrophic 91% downgrade in resource estimates in 2015 stands as one of the most glaring examples. After it began initial production at the F2 gold deposit on its Phoenix property in Ontario’s Red Lake district, the company found the deposit to be uneconomic, shuttering the operation. It had not completed a feasibility study for the high-grade project.

The size of the downgrade blindsided investors and stakeholders, and the company had to undergo a painful restructuring to survive. Rebranded as Battle North Gold, Evolution Mining (ASX: EVN) bought it and its renamed Bateman project in 2021 for $343 million.

In 2018, Pretium Resources promoted the Brucejack gold project in northwestern British Columbia’s Golden Triangle, now owned by Newmont (NYSE: NEM, TSX: NGT, ASX: NEM, PNGX: NEM), as a high-grade gold deposit. Yet, the asset disappointed when gold production grades fell far below expectations.

The nuggety nature of the gold, with Brucejack’s steeply dipping quartz veins and erratic grade distribution, made it difficult to consistently meet production targets, forcing the company to push tonnage through the mill to compensate for lower-than-expected grades.

How ‘resource debt’ chips away at miners’ growth and investor trust
Newmont’s Brucejack operation in B.C. this July during a helicopter fly-by. Credit: Henry Lazenby

Aurora (2018), Rainy River (2019), and Gold Bar (2020) show how resource overestimation hurt Guyana Goldfields, New Gold (TSX: NGD; NYSE: NGD) and McEwen Mining (TSX: MUX; NYSE: MUX). They had to downgrade estimates mid-operation. This triggered mine plan revisions, soaring costs, production delays, and financial strain.

Grade versus geometric risk

Desharnais identifies two types of risk that contribute to resource misclassification: grade risk and geometric risk.

Grade risk reflects patchiness in ore quality, while geometric risk involves uncertainty about the size and shape of mineralized domains within the deposit.

Conditional simulations help assess grade risk, Desharnais said, but tools to quantify geometric risk are lacking.

Companies often overestimate deposit geometry without tighter drilling, leading to costly misjudgments.

“Sparse drilling gives us a simpler picture than reality,” he explained, adding that only closely spaced drilling can reveal the true complexity of orebodies.

Best practices

Mathieu Doucette, a senior geologist at ArcelorMittal (NYSE: MT), talked about the difficulty of classifying resources at Canada’s largest iron mine, the Mont-Wright iron ore mine in Quebec, producing continuously since 1974. Outdated data can affect current resource estimates. He illustrated how mixing in fresh drill holes helps manage geological risk as part of a dynamic model essential to avoid misclassification.

“The first thing [a QP] will do is akin to lighting a torch,” he said. “But everything on the edges is dark, and you can’t really see it. Drill holes are our ability to try and get some information, but sparse data hides the full picture.”

David Machuca-Mory, a principal consultant at SRK Consulting, said fixed models are risky. Deposits can be more unpredictable than they seem. Adaptive methods help ensure estimates reflect reality, reducing the chance of costly surprises.

“Even with dense drilling, some areas remain highly uncertain,” Machuca-Mory said. “Confidence intervals are large, and relying solely on drill spacing doesn’t always guarantee accurate classification.”

Cognitive biases

Desharnais said that misclassification is not just a technical problem; human psychology plays a significant role.

Anchoring bias makes companies stick with initial estimates despite new data. Authority bias pressures geologists and consultants to confirm favourable results to please management or investors.

“The consulting firm wants the next contract,” Desharnais said. “The CEO has family and friends invested and needs good news. These biases create a system where classification debt builds up across projects, only to be paid through painful revisions later.”

Owning up

Desharnais argued for more conservative resource models and said benchmarking against operating mines would help set realistic expectations. He suggested that technical reports include histograms that show the distance between drill holes and classified resources, he added.

“It forces the QP or CP to look at what they’ve done and ask: Does this make sense?” he said. “Transparent reporting would help prevent overly aggressive classifications, ensuring companies earn their resource classifications with sufficient data.”

Such measures may slow development, but they could also reduce the prevalence of misclassified resources in the industry. Desharnais urged geologists to scrutinize each block of material above the cut-off grade.

“Over-promising today only delays the inevitable correction tomorrow,” he said.

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China to launch platinum, palladium futures in Q1, producers’ council says https://www.mining.com/web/china-will-launch-platinum-palladium-futures-in-q1-producers-council-says/ https://www.mining.com/web/china-will-launch-platinum-palladium-futures-in-q1-producers-council-says/#respond Tue, 15 Oct 2024 15:02:02 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1163117 The Guangzhou Futures Exchange (GFEX) is expected to launch its first platinum and palladium futures contracts in China in the first quarter of 2025, Weibin Deng, head of Asia Pacific at the World Platinum Investment Council, told a conference.

The contracts will be the first domestic price-hedging mechanism for platinum and palladium in the world’s second-largest economy, where the metals are used by auto makers and other industries, including jewellery and investment products.

The GFEX declined to comment.

The World Platinum Investment Council, whose five members are major platinum producers, hopes hedging will help revive demand for platinum jewellery, Deng told the London Bullion Market Association’s annual conference in Miami on Monday.

Hedging by jewellery makers could reduce the premium they charge clients and the discount on buybacks of jewellery and platinum products, which could boost demand, the council said.

While China is the key market for platinum group metals, platinum jewellery demand in the country has slumped 79% from a peak of around 2 million troy ounces in 2014 amid a downturn in consumer preference for the metal.

(By Polina Devitt and Amy Lv; Editing by Sonali Paul)

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Sibanye-Stillwater faces $522 million compensation claim over scrapped mine deal https://www.mining.com/sibanye-stillwater-liable-to-pay-appian-1-2-billion-for-scrapped-mine-deals/ https://www.mining.com/sibanye-stillwater-liable-to-pay-appian-1-2-billion-for-scrapped-mine-deals/#comments Mon, 14 Oct 2024 10:28:34 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1162794 Appian Capital Advisory last week scored a big win after the UK top court ruled that Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW) (NYSE: SBSW) had to pay the London-based investment firm compensation for the termination of a $1.2 billion deal to buy two Brazilian mines. 

An Appian spokesperson told MINING.COM on Monday that the company will seek $522 million, plus additional interest and legal costs accrued from the liability trial in July 2024 until the upcoming trial to determine the exact amount Sibanye will have to pay, in November 2025. “The total claim by the time of the quantum trial will be in excess of $600 million,” the person said.

Sibanye-Stillwater spokesperson James Wellsted told Reuters on Monday that Sibanye’s case is that Appian “is entitled to either no or significantly reduced damages.” 

Appian took Sibanye-Stillwater to court in 2022, after the South African precious metals miner scrapped a transaction to buy shares in Atlantic Nickel and Mineração Vale Verde, owners of the Santa Rita nickel and Serrote copper mines in Brazil, respectively.

The acquisition of the two operations was meant to boost Sibanye’s critical metals portfolio as it sought to diversify away from platinum and gold.

Sibanye cited a geotechnical event at Santa Rita as the reason for terminating the deals. Appian claimed the miner’s decision was based on an “incorrect assertion”.

In the ruling, handed down following a five-week trial, Justice Butcher said the geotechnical event used by Sibanye as reason for withdrawing from the deal was neither expected to be material nor reasonably anticipated to become so.

Butcher noted there was “no other basis on which Sibanye was entitled to terminate the sale and purchase agreements (SPAs).”

Appian said it plans to recover the full extent of its losses, including all interest accumulated since January 2022, when Sibanye walked away from the deal.

Should Sibanye fail to pay the full amount awarded in the November 2025 trial, Appian said it would pursue all available enforcement measures.

In a separate statement, Sibanye noted the company was successful in having Appian’s claim of willful misconduct dismissed.

“The judge ruled that Sibanye-Stillwater management genuinely believed that it was entitled to terminate the SPAs in what they perceived as the best interests of Sibanye-Stillwater,” it said.

The company argues that Appian could have sold the Santa Rita and Serrote mines to another buyer for a similar price, which in Sibanye’s view means that Appian cannot claim all losses to be covered by Sibanye-Stillwater.

“The judgment notes that Appian received multiple offers for the mines after Sibanye-Stillwater terminated the SPAs. Accordingly, Sibanye-Stillwater will continue to defend the claim vigorously at the trial in November 2025,” it said.

Atlantic Nickel’s Santa Rita open pit mine in the Brazilian state of Bahia is one of the few long-life nickel sulphide mines currently in production. It also yields copper, cobalt, and platinum group metals as by-products.

The company is advancing the mine’s underground extension as it transitions from open-pit to underground operations. This shift to higher-grade nickel is expected to boost production rates and extend the mine’s operational life to over 20 years.

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The top 50 biggest mining companies in the world https://www.mining.com/top-50-biggest-mining-companies/ https://www.mining.com/top-50-biggest-mining-companies/#comments Sat, 05 Oct 2024 09:59:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=881263 The world’s 50 biggest miners are now worth $1.5 trillion, up $76 billion during Q3 as gold miners climb the rankings and Chinese mining stocks get a late boost. 

At the end of the third quarter of 2024, the MINING.COM TOP 50* ranking of the world’s most valuable miners had a combined market capitalization of $1.51 trillion, up just under $76 billion from end-June, largely on the back of gold and royalty stocks.

The total stock market valuation of the world’s biggest mining companies is up a fairly modest 8% year to end-September and despite the good run is still $240 billion below the peak hit in the second quarter of 2022.  

Ranks, value of gold stocks swell

The value of precious metals and royalty companies climbed by a combined $42 billion or 16% during the quarter and gold counters dominate the best performing ranks. 

Value of top 50 mining companies jumps to second highest on record

Were it not for the limited tradability of stock in Russia’s Polyus, which lost some ground over the three months despite gold’s stellar performance, bullion’s effect on the Top 50 would have been even more pronounced. 

Canada’s Alamos Gold joins the top 50 for the first time with a  more than 31% jump in value lifting it six places to number 48 with a valuation of $8.2 billion at the end of the quarter while the second quarter’s newcomer Pan American Silver (following its absorption of Yamana Gold) hangs on at no 50.

Alamos Gold last month raised its production guidance by over 20% for 2025-2026 with the inclusion of the Magino mine and its integration with its Island Gold operation in Ontario. The Toronto based miner has long term ambitions to grow its production base to 900,000 ounces per year.

Uzbekistan is readying an IPO for Navoi Mining and Metallurgy Combinat – the world’s fourth largest gold mining company and significant uranium producer in 2025. NMMC debuted a $1 billion bond offering last week, marking the first global debt market issuance from a gold mining company since June 2023.

Navoi should easily join the ranks of gold producers in the top 50 thanks to ownership of the world’s largest gold mine, Muruntau, and annual production of 2.9 million ounces at grades and per ounce extraction costs the envy of the sector.  

The Muruntau open pit mine southwest of the Kyzylkum desert, originally developed during the Soviet era as a source of uranium, has estimated reserves of around 130 million ounces of gold. 

Goldilocks copper

Value of top 50 mining companies jumps to second highest on record

Copper specialists, and those with fat gold credits, have gained a combined 36% year to date as the copper price continues to flirt with the $10,000 a tonne level but momentum slowed dramatically during Q3 with the group contributing only $7.2 billion in added market worth during the quarter. 

Amman Mineral’s fierce rally also came to an abrupt halt during the quarter with the counter losing 18% over the three months and coming close to falling out of the top 10.

Investors who bought Amman, owner of the world’s third largest mine worldwide in terms of copper equivalent, at the IPO price in Jakarta a year ago, are still enjoying 400% gains since then however. 

Southern Copper’s position as the world’s third most valuable mining stock seems entrenched after a double digit percentage gain in Q3 compared to a much more sedate performance by Freeport-McMoRan which now has to gain a full $20 billion in market cap to haul in its Mexico City-based rival.

Light on lithium 

Rio Tinto’s vote of confidence in the long term future of the lithium sector (and its own ability to make M&A work) dominated the news at the start of the December-quarter but it’s worth noting that Arcadium’s more than 90% surge since the all-cash offer was first announced are not enough for the stock to enter the rankings.

Three lithium counters exited the rankings this year, Australia’s  Pilbara Minerals and Mineral Resources and China’s Tianqi Lithium as the deep slump in prices for the battery metal continues to take its toll.  

Last quarter’s no 50, Ganfeng Lithium jumps six places after being swept up in the stimulus-induced rally on Chinese stock markets at the end of the quarter while Tianqi’s performance so far in October should see it reenter the Top 50 in due course. 

Ganfeng was barely holding on at position 50 at end-June and with gold price momentum continuing and two gold mining companies waiting in the winds – Yintai and Alamos – only three lithium counters in the top 50 may be a reality for some time to come. 

After peaking in the second quarter of 2022 with a combined value of nearly $120 billion, the remaining lithium stocks’ market value has now shrunk to $34 billion.  

Iron ore ground down

Despite a modest improvement during the quarter, the mining industry’s traditional big 5 – BHP, Rio Tinto, Glencore, Vale and Anglo American – remain in the red for 2024, losing $24 billion since the start of the year. 

The big 5 diversifieds now make up 29% of the total index, down from a height of 38% at the end of 2022.  

Iron ore’s less than rosy outlook – the late boost China’s recent stimulus package notwithstanding – saw Fortescue once again feature on the biggest losers list and Cleveland Cliffs exit the ranking with the US iron ore miner’s 37% decline this year exacerbated by its inability to capitalize on the blocking of the Nippon-US Steel tie up. 

Iron ore’s representation in the top 50 have diminished in the last couple of years – Brazil’s CSN Mineração dropped out during Q1 this year while Anglo-controlled and separately-listed Kumba Iron Ore has lost touch with the top tier after a 40% fall year to date.

Click on image for full size table.

NOTES:

Source: MINING.COM, stock exchange data, company reports. Share data from primary-listed exchange at close Oct 4, 2024 close of trading converted to US$ where applicable. Percentage change based on US$ market cap difference, not share price change in local currency.  

As with any ranking, criteria for inclusion are contentious. We decided to exclude unlisted and state-owned enterprises at the outset due to a lack of information. That, of course, excludes giants like Chile’s Codelco, Uzbekistan’s Navoi Mining (the gold and uranium giant may list later this year), Eurochem, a major potash firm, and a number of entities in China and developing countries around the world.

Another central criterion was the depth of involvement in the industry before an enterprise can rightfully be called a mining company.

For instance, should smelter companies or commodity traders that own minority stakes in mining assets be included, especially if these investments have no operational component or warrant a seat on the board?

This is a common structure in Asia and excluding these types of companies removed well-known names like Japan’s Marubeni and Mitsui, Korea Zinc and Chile’s Copec. 

Levels of operational or strategic involvement and size of shareholding were other central considerations. Do streaming and royalty companies that receive metals from mining operations without shareholding qualify or are they just specialised financing vehicles? We included Franco Nevada, Royal Gold and Wheaton Precious Metals on the basis of their deep involvement in the industry.

Vertically integrated concerns like Alcoa and energy companies such as Shenhua Energy or Bayan Resources where power, ports and railways make up a large portion of revenues pose a problem. The revenue mix also tends to change alongside volatile coal prices. Same goes for battery makers like China’s CATL which is increasingly moving upstream, but where mining will continue to represent a small portion of its valuation.  

Another consideration is diversified companies such as Anglo American with separately listed majority-owned subsidiaries. We’ve included Angloplat in the ranking but excluded Kumba Iron Ore in which Anglo has a 70% stake to avoid double counting. Similarly we excluded Hindustan Zinc which is listed separately but majority owned by Vedanta.

Many steelmakers own and often operate iron ore and other metal mines, but in the interest of balance and diversity we excluded the steel industry, and with that many companies that have substantial mining assets including giants like ArcelorMittal, Magnitogorsk, Ternium, Baosteel and many others.

Head office refers to operational headquarters wherever applicable, for example BHP and Rio Tinto are shown as Melbourne, Australia, but Antofagasta is the exception that proves the rule. We consider the company’s HQ to be in London, where it has been listed since the late 1800s.

Please let us know of any errors, omissions, deletions or additions to the ranking or suggest a different methodology.

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Teck options Canterra project in Ring of Fire https://www.mining.com/teck-options-canterra-project-in-ring-of-fire/ Tue, 01 Oct 2024 19:45:25 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1162059 Teck Resources (TSX: TECK.A, TECK.B; NYSE: TCK) is jumping into the action in Ontario’s Ring of Fire. Canada’s biggest diversified miner has entered into an option agreement with Canterra Minerals (TSXV: CRM) to acquire 100% of Canterra’s property in the region.

Teck will pay a total of C$275,000 cash over the next two years, and Canterra will retain a 1.5% net smelter royalty. The NSR can be reduced to 0.5% upon the exercise of a buy-back right by Teck for a further C$2 million to Canterra.

Canterra’s Ring of Fire Property covers approximately 30 sq. km. of land acquired through staking in 2023. It is located 40 km from the Eagle’s Nest nickel-platinum group metals deposit, owned by Australian Wyloo Pty.

Canterra calls this area of the James Bay Lowlands ‘largely unexplored’ due to limited bedrock exposure. The property is known to host several strong VTEM anomalies identified as high-priority drill targets.

The property covers several geophysical targets within bedrock units, that based upon their geophysical attributes, are inferred to be similar to host rocks to the Eagle’s Nest deposit, including mafic to ultramafic intrusive rocks prospective for magmatic nickel sulphide deposits.

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Canada to invest $42 million in Yukon, Northern British Columbia mining infrastructure https://www.mining.com/canada-to-invest-42-million-on-yukon-northern-bc-mining-infrastructure/ https://www.mining.com/canada-to-invest-42-million-on-yukon-northern-bc-mining-infrastructure/#comments Mon, 23 Sep 2024 18:41:42 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1161392 Aiming to position itself as a first-class producer of critical minerals during the energy transition, Canada is making a further investment of up to C$60 million ($42 million) towards two priority regions in the north: the Yukon Territory and British Columbia’s Golden Triangle.

The investment was announced last week by Jonathan Wilkinson, Minister of Energy and Natural Resources, alongside BC’s Minister of Energy, Mines and Low Carbon Innovation Josie Osborne and Yukon Premier Ranj Pillai.

The C$60 million in funding, subject to final due diligence by Natural Resources Canada (NRCan), will be divided between two key infrastructure projects for critical minerals mining, one in each region.

“Developments like these help mines get built faster, and they are a key element in seizing the generational opportunity before us”

Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Jonathan Wilkinson

Approximately C$20 million will fund the construction of a 43-km access road linking the proposed Galore Creek copper mine located in Tahltan Territory in northern BC. The deposits at Galore Creek are estimated to contain over 12 billion lb. of copper, which would significantly increase Canada’s annual copper supply once in production. The mine is being developed under a 50/50 joint venture between Newmont and Teck Resources.

The other C$40 million will be used by the Yukon government to undertake pre-feasibility activities to advance a 765-km, high-voltage transmission line network that would connect the Yukon electrical grid to the North American grid in BC. The transmission line, says NRCan, could support projects producing critical minerals such as cobalt, copper, molybdenum, nickel, platinum group metals, tungsten and zinc.

These infrastructure projects, combined with the recently announced Northwest BC Highway Corridor Improvements project, are key to facilitating critical minerals development in the Golden Triangle, which holds approximately 75% of Canada’s known copper reserves, and Yukon, NRCan said.

The fundings, if approved, are to be provided through the Critical Minerals Infrastructure Fund (CMIF) — a key program under the Canadian government’s strategy to address infrastructure gaps and enable sustainable critical minerals production.

“These two projects, under the Canadian Critical Minerals Strategy’s flagship program, will develop the necessary infrastructure to access and transport our rich critical mineral resources in northern BC and the Yukon,” Minister of Energy and Natural Resources Jonathan Wilkinson said in a press release on Friday.

“Developments like these help mines get built faster, and they are a key element in seizing the generational opportunity before us. These investments are needed to support critical minerals development in the region, improve community access and safety, and create good mining jobs across British Columbia and the Yukon,” he said.

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CHART: Global mining and metals – a quick reality check https://www.mining.com/chart-global-mining-and-metals-a-quick-reality-check/ Thu, 19 Sep 2024 20:15:28 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1161145 A new report by McKinsey’s energy and materials practice outlines a global mining and metals industry emerging from a few years of boom and bust and price fluctuations the consulting firm calls unprecedented in scale. 

Nevertheless, says McKinsey, the industry is in healthier financial shape compared to historical averages. 

From 2000 to 2023, metals and mining revenues grew by $1.7 trillion, a jump of roughly 75% and affording the industry a 70% slice of the overall materials business which also includes plastics, pulp, and building materials. As a whole, materials represent some 7% of the global GDP.  

Profits in the industry have also been robust with mining, refining and metal fabrication EBITDA nearly doubling over the almost quarter century going from $500 billion to $900 billion. 

Moreover, Mckinsey points out, mining and metal companies’ debt burden has decreased with net debt over EBITDA ratios of 1.3 times, well below the through-cycle average of 1.8 times. 

“However, 2024 has already proven to be a more challenging year for the industry as overall economic growth slows down and the shift toward low-carbon technologies unfolds more slowly than expected, both of which are putting downward pressure on price levels, especially for battery materials, such as nickel and lithium,” McKinsey says.

CHART: Global mining and metals – a quick reality check
Source: McKinsey’s Global Energy & Materials Practice Global Materials Perspective 2024 

Not only are battery and other metals associated with decarbonisation facing headwinds, the sector – even when lumping in bellwether copper – hardly makes up 15% of global metals and mining revenues. Until such time the copper price reaches the levels predicted by more outlandish scenarios, the share is not likely to grow much.  

For instance, the market size of rare earths mining, and metal and alloy production (included in the other section of the graph) which is used in defence applications and many energy transition applications including wind turbines and motors for electric vehicles, is below $20 billion.

Thermal coal and steel account for around 60%–70% of revenues and production volumes of 7 billion tonnes and 2 billion tonnes respectively are more than 30 times higher than all other metals and minerals combined. Output by the largest among the latter, aluminum, at roughly 100 million tonnes, does not make much of a dent in the overall total.

The bulk of mining and metals activity and revenues remains subjected to the ups and downs of the global economy, particularly the outlook for China where the signs are not great.  

While the green energy transition may rightfully represent a new dawn for mining, it’s still very early in the morning.

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Magna Mining PEA update hikes return five-fold for Crean Hill nickel project https://www.mining.com/magna-mining-pea-update-hikes-return-five-fold-for-crean-hill-nickel-project/ Tue, 17 Sep 2024 16:57:03 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1160877 An updated preliminary economic assessment (PEA) for Magna Mining’s (TSXV: NICU) Crean Hill project near Sudbury, Ontario, bumps its internal rate of return more than five times to 129% compared with the initial study last year.

The new PEA, released Tuesday, pegs pre-production cash costs for the nickel-copper-PGE project at C$27.7 million, down from C$81 million in the initial study, and gives the underground mine a base case post-tax net present value (at an 8% discount) of C$194.1 million and a 13-year mine life.

“A low capital approach of establishing a new surface portal will provide quick access to the resource, allowing us to offset capital costs with early revenues,” Jeff Huffman, chief operating officer, said in a release. “The project timeline has been derisked by having environmental permits approved and in-hand, as well as more detailed stope planning and sequence optimization.”

The update comes just over one year after its predecessor and almost six months after Magna inked a toll-milling agreement with Vale (NYSE: VALE). It would send initial production from Crean Hill to Vale’s nearby Clarabelle mill.

Stock uptick

Magna shares gained 2.6% to C$1.18 apiece on Tuesday morning in Toronto, valuing the company at C$201.1 million. Its shares traded in a 52-range of C$0.37 to C$1.35. 

The study assumes metal prices of $8.50 per lb. nickel, $4.00 per lb. copper and $13.00 per lb. cobalt. Also factored in are $900 per oz. platinum, $1,000 per oz. palladium and $2,150 per oz. gold.

Pre-production capital could be paid back within the first year of commercial production, which would be preceded by a 15-month period of advanced exploration, Magna said. Cash costs from that period could be paid back within the second year of commercial production.

The average production rate is estimated at 2,200 tonnes per day, including 1,650 tonnes of higher-margin primary feed and 550 tonnes per day of lower grade feed.

Historic shaft uses

Initial mining is to happen by ramp access through a new surface portal and the eventual re-establishment of the historical Number Two shaft for personnel access and hoisting. The site hosts a past-producing mine that operated between 1900 and 2002 under various owners including Inco and Vale.

Crean Hill’s underground portion hosts 14.5 million indicated tonnes grading 0.96% nickel, 0.84% copper, 0.03% cobalt, 0.88 gram per tonne platinum, 1.02 grams palladium and 0.54 gram gold, according to a resource from 2022. Inferred resources measure 1.1 million tonnes at 0.61% nickel, 0.46% copper, 0.02% cobalt, 0.64 gram platinum, 1.09 grams palladium and 0.21 gram gold.

Its open-pit portion hosts 16.7 indicated tonnes at 0.53% nickel, 0.49% copper, 0.02% cobalt, 0.48 gram platinum, 0.37 gram palladium and 0.25 gram gold. Inferred resources total 430,000 tonnes at 0.43% nickel, 0.49% copper, 0.02% cobalt, 0.29 gram platinum, 0.14 gram palladium and 0.07 gram gold.

Total contained metal is estimated at more than 500 million lb. nickel, 450 million lb. copper, 650,000 oz. platinum, 675,000 oz. palladium and 385,000 oz. of gold. Magna bought Crean Hill, formerly known as Denison, in August 2022 for C$16 million when it acquired Lonmin Canada.

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Sibanye to slash output to turn around US palladium mines https://www.mining.com/web/sibanye-stillwater-posts-394-million-loss-on-weak-prices-us-impairment/ https://www.mining.com/web/sibanye-stillwater-posts-394-million-loss-on-weak-prices-us-impairment/#respond Thu, 12 Sep 2024 13:41:49 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1160363 Sibanye Stillwater Ltd. plans further restructuring at its mines in Montana that could cut output of palladium and platinum by as much as 45% in a bid to return them to profitability.

Palladium – the main metal produced at Sibanye’s US operations – is trading at less than a third of its peak in March 2022. The company says more cost-cutting is required at its American mining assets, after previously writing down their value by about $2.4 billion.

“Further restructuring of the US PGM operations is necessary to reduce cash outflows,” Sibanye said in a statement on Thursday.

The company said it would undertake a “fundamental review” of the operations to bring down costs. Sibanye shares jumped more than 13% in Johannesburg trading.

Sibanye’s diversification into platinum-group metals — from its original dependence on aging South African gold mines — yielded bumper profits in the early years of this decade. Now slumping prices have forced the company and peers like Anglo American Platinum Ltd. to slash costs and reduce their workforces.

The restructuring is likely to result in platinum and palladium production from the Stillwater assets in the US being reduced by approximately 200,000 ounces from 2025. Sibanye is forecasting output of 440,000-460,000 ounces this year.

The company intends to suspend operations at the Stillwater West project and curtail production at the East Boulder mine, while increasing output of higher grade material from Stillwater East. That will result in the loss of about 800 jobs, following smaller reductions that came when Sibanye shelved an expansion late last year.

The South African firm announced the new cost-cutting plans as it posted a first-half loss of 7.1 billion rand ($396 million). That included a 7.5 billion-rand impairment at the US mines.

Sibanye – which has about 15% fewer workers in South Africa than at the end of 2022 – said that PGM operations in its home country remained profitable even as the average price received for the metals was 28% lower than a year earlier.

The firm also cut its guidance for gold output in 2024 by as much as 19% following disruptions at two projects.

North American mines, which tend to contain more palladium, are particularly vulnerable in the current market. Sibanye’s peer Impala Platinum Holdings Ltd. is shortening the life of its asset in Canada. Projects in South Africa typically produce a greater share of platinum, which has dropped by a smaller amount.

Producers of PGMs – which are used in devices to curb emissions in gasoline and diesel vehicles – are focused on finding alternative long-term applications for the metals as electric vehicles increase their market share.

Sibanye has been bolstering its financial position. Last month, the company announced it had agreed €500 million of financing for a lithium project in Finland, concluded a 1.8 billion rand prepayment deal for gold production and increased its rand revolving-credit facility to 6 billion rand.

The miner said on Thursday that it’s in the advanced stages of securing an additional $600 million to $700 million through prepay and stream agreements for chrome, gold and PGM production.

Profit before some one-time items – known as headline earnings – declined 98% to 137 million rand.

(By William Clowes)

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South Africa’s platinum output back to pre-covid levels on job cuts https://www.mining.com/south-africas-platinum-output-back-to-pre-covid-levels-on-job-cuts/ Thu, 12 Sep 2024 11:45:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1160368 South Africa’s platinum supply has returned to pre-covid-19 levels, driven by widespread job cuts and operational recalibrations in the face of falling prices, according to data from The World Platinum Investment Council (WPIC).

The industry body, funded by South African platinum miners Anglo American (LON: AAL), Northam Platinum, Sedibelo Platinum Mines, Impala Platinum Holdings (JSE: IMP), and Tharisa (JSE: THA) – estimates the global industry has shed around 10,000 jobs this year alone.

The WPIC’s latest report highlights the significant impact of declining platinum group metals (PGMs) prices on the sector, especially in South Africa, which accounts for about 70% of global output.

The plunge in PGMs prices has been a key driver behind the current challenges in the sector. Platinum, used in automotive catalytic converters, jewellery, and various industrial applications, has seen demand volatility due to shifts in global markets and the transition toward greener technologies.

The pressure of weak prices on margins has forced companies to slash their workforce in order to remain viable. According to the WPIC, the sector is now operating at levels last seen before the pandemic, which caused major disruptions and uncertainty across global commodity markets.

Long-term production concerns

While job cuts have provided short-term relief for mining companies, the WPIC is concerned about the long-term consequences. Reducing the workforce could erode South Africa’s production capacity, leading to a potential shortfall in global supply over time, it said. 

Production in South Africa this year is expected to fall 2% year-on-year to around 3.9 million ounces.

“The current strategy may risk long-term production erosion,” the Council said, emphasizing the need for a careful balance between cost-cutting and maintaining sustainable output levels.

The WPIC warns that without careful management, the sector could face a deeper supply crisis in the future, which could destabilize not only South Africa’s mining sector but also global platinum markets. 

 With declines in Russian output, global production this year is seen falling 2% to 5.5 million ounces, a four-year low, the Council said.

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EV slump powers platinum supply deficit, investment council says https://www.mining.com/ev-slump-powers-platinum-supply-deficit-investment-council-says/ Tue, 10 Sep 2024 14:04:24 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1160222 The third-lowest platinum mining output this century can’t keep up with rising investment demand, jewelry and a sustained traditional car market using catalytic converters, according to an industry group.

A 1-million-oz. deficit is forecast this year, up from 731,000 oz. in 2023, as supply edges 1% lower to nearly 7.1 million oz. while demand is expected to grow 3% – the largest gain in five years – to 8.1 million oz., the World Platinum Investment Council says in a new report released on Tuesday.

The council, which represents miners of platinum group metals, forecasts investor demand – driven by exchange traded funds (ETFs) and metal bar and coin sales in China – to rise 15% to 517,000 oz. this year.

Jewelry use is to increase by 7% while mining production is to ease by 1%. Automotive and industrial demand are each predicted to increase 1%, but their levels are already high, the council’s research director, Edward Sterck, told The Northern Miner by phone.

“Automotive demand is at a seven-year high and very much the theme there is higher-for-longer demand for internal combustion engine-containing vehicles,” Sterck said from London where the council is based. “If you exclude the Covid-impacted 2020, and 2014 which was impacted by strikes, it’s actually the weakest year for mine supply since 2000.”

Electric vehicles

Platinum demand can act as a kind of bellwether for the uptake of electric vehicles (EVs), which don’t use catalytic converters to reduce emissions. Leading automakers such as Ford, Toyota and Stellantis have scaled back EV production amid slower than expected sales although hybrids are maintaining growth as vehicle producers lean on them to hit emissions targets. Hybrid autos require more platinum proportionally than traditional cars because their systems operate at lower temperatures, Sterck said.

The council – funded by South African platinum miners Anglo American (LSE: AAL), Northam Platinum, Sedibelo Platinum Mines, Impala Platinum Holdings (JSE: IMP), and Tharisa (JSE: THA) – sees more cost-driven restructuring in South Africa, the leading platinum producer. Production there this year is expected to fall 2% year-on-year to around 3.9 million ounces. With declines in Russian output, global production this year is seen falling 2% to 5.5 million oz., a four-year low, the council said.

Miners have cut back on their capital spending programs substantially and shed about 10,000 jobs, about 6% of the workforce, through the usual legal processes and avoiding labour unrest, Sterck said.

“They’re just effectively trying to improve their labour productivity and drive down their operating costs,” he said. “We’re not expecting any dramatic production cuts as a result of the low palladium and rhodium prices, but the cutback in capex and headcount means you’re probably going to see a gradual erosion of supply going forwards.”

The price of platinum has fallen about 4% this year to about $950 per oz. on Tuesday. Rhodium increased 9.2% this year to $4,750 per ounce​.

Recycling, industries

Global recycling is expected to reach nearly 1.6 million oz. this year, a 2% year-on-year increase.  The spent autocatalyst market should show signs of stabilizing after two years of declines, the council said. Above-ground stockpiles are forecast to drop for the second year in a row, with one-quarter plunge to a four-year low of 3 million oz., just over four months’ worth of demand cover.

Industrial demand is forecast to reach 2.4 million oz. in 2024, marking a 1% year-on-year increase over the elevated levels of 2023. It offsets a sharp decline in platinum chemical offtake, which dropped by nearly half year-on-year to 122,000 oz. in the second quarter, primarily due to a slowdown in China’s petrochemical industry. Chemical demand is expected to decrease by 31% to 542,000 ounces.

Investors

The quarterly report of the council marked the first time it included demand figures from Chinese investors in bars and coins of more than 500 grams. They’re expected to achieve 40% year-on-year growth for full-year 2024 to 188,000 ounces. However, bar and coin investment fell in Japan and in North America.

“We’ve seen, obviously, a lot of demand for gold investment product in China,” Sterck said. “That’s flowing through to platinum investment demand, and that’s grown from effectively from zero five years ago.”

During the second quarter, investment demand surged to its highest level since 2020’s third-quarter, driven by a substantial inflow of 444,000 oz. into platinum ETFs. These included the London-based Wisdom Tree Physical Platinum fund with $629 million under management, and the iShares Physical Platinum fund with $165.9 million.

Jewelry, hydrogen

Historically high gold prices are helping platinum jewelry demand grow to a forecast 2 million oz. this year. India shows strong 28% growth, Japan is forecast to rise by 8% while Europe and North America are expected to reach record high increases of 4% and 3%, respectively. China is set to improve by 3%, reversing a decline in demand that has persisted since 2013, the council said.

The metal’s use is expanding in transportation with the mandated spread of hydrogen fuel cells and charging stations in China and Europe. But its appeal may be limited in North America to long-distance trucking where battery-powered 18-wheelers are impractical on cross-continental routes, Sterck said.

“The challenge is the refueling infrastructure,” he said. “You can’t, with current battery technology, economically electrify coast-to-coast truck transportation because you’re giving up a third of your payload to your battery weight, you’ve got to stop for six hours charging every day, plus arguably in the Midwest, for example, the grids can’t supply that megawatt charging per vehicle requirements.

“So, hydrogen actually is a potential solution to that, and it’s one that’s probably lower cost and easier to implement, but that’s the main scenario where it makes sense in North America.”

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Hybrid cars throw lifeline to platinum metals https://www.mining.com/web/hybrid-cars-throw-lifeline-to-platinum-metals/ https://www.mining.com/web/hybrid-cars-throw-lifeline-to-platinum-metals/#respond Tue, 10 Sep 2024 14:04:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1160143 A surge in sales of hybrid cars as electric vehicle take-up slows is set to provide an unexpected boost to demand for platinum group metals (PGMs) in the coming years, similar to the extended lifespan now predicted for coal.

PGMs – principally platinum and palladium – face a long-term structural decline in demand as their main use has been to clean auto exhausts, a process that is not needed in pure EVs.

A few years ago, the prospects for PGMs, and producers such as Anglo Platinum, Impala Platinum and Sibanye Stillwater, appeared grim as EV sales soared, and the drop-off in demand was expected to be steep.

But a tapering in growth of EV sales, and a surge in demand for hybrid cars that need catalytic converters to curb pollution, have given PGMs a new lease of life that could put a floor under prices and keep some mines open for longer.

“You’re still facing an outright demand decline, but there’s not an immediate collapse, which could have been the projection in some (previous) scenarios,” said Marcus Garvey, head of commodities strategy at Macquarie Bank in Singapore.

The increase in sales of pure EVs globally in the first half of 2024 slowed to 11% year-on-year, while plug-in hybrid (PHEV) sales jumped 44%, according to consultancy Rho Motion.

For EVs, the figures are a big fall-off from two years ago when sales rocketed 77%.

Popular PHEVs include BYD’s Song and the BMW 3 Series.

Garvey said the PGM situation had some parallels to coal, which is being phased out as governments slash carbon emissions, but will still be needed for years until more renewable energy is rolled out.

Weak PGM prices are currently curbing investment in production and if miners decide to shut operations due to low profitability, prices could become volatile.

“The scope for the market to get tighter than currently projected seems very, very high if we start to see some producer response,” Garvey said.

Hybrid strength

The rise of hybrids could last until 2030 or longer, extending the period when PGMs are needed, analysts said.

“The shift to hybridization could be quite meaningful for the longer-term sustainability of the PGM industry,” said Wilma Swarts, director of PGMs at consultancy Metals Focus.

The weakness in EV sales means that combined sales of petrol and hybrid cars, which was expected to be flat last year, climbed by 9%, according to catalyst maker and PGM specialist Johnson Matthey.

“This alone added 600,000 ounces to our automotive PGM demand estimates,” it said in a report, adding that total auto PGM demand rose 8% last year to 13.1 million ounces, the second highest total ever.

Reuters Graphics Reuters Graphics

Surge in plug-in hybrids

The biggest growth area has been in PHEVs in China, which saw sales surge by 70% in the first half.

Consultancy Alix Partners has more than doubled its forecast for the global share of PHEVs to 12% by 2030 from 5% two years ago.

“We have marked it up quite significantly because of the developments in the last couple of years,” said Gerrit Reepmeyer at Alix.

A survey by Alix this year showed that in the world’s two biggest car markets, the United States and China, more than 80% of consumers who were likely to buy an EV were veering towards a PHEV rather than a pure EV.

That could boost PGM demand as about 10-15% more platinum metals are needed in PHEVs than petrol vehicles because engine pollution is higher when starting a cold engine, Swarts said. Petrol engines in hybrids, especially PHEVs, are infrequently used and so often start cold.

Shifting resources

Analysts say the trend towards hybrids is expected to persist until EVs can compete on price with petrol cars worldwide, batteries offer longer driving ranges, and more charging stations are rolled out.

Many carmakers are happy shifting resources to hybrids, which have higher margins than EVs.

Last week, the world’s biggest automaker Toyota was reported to have slashed its EV production plans for 2026 by a third, while Sweden’s Volvo Cars scrapped its target of going all electric by 2030.

Ford, Toyota and Stellantis have all burnished their hybrid plans in recent months.

“Automakers are trying to find that sweet spot in terms of profitability, consumer acceptance and compliance with regulations,” Swarts said.

New US auto emission regulations also bolster the outlook for hybrids by allowing automakers to comply with an EV mandate by producing more gas-electric hybrids.

The US and Canada have seen the biggest gains in conventional hybrid sales, up 33% in the first half of 2024.

Each additional million cars that need catalysts will add about 150,000 ounces of PGM demand, Swarts said.

In China, where EVs are already similar in price to petrol cars, many consumers are opting for extended range plug-in hybrids. In such vehicles the petrol engine is solely used for charging the battery, providing longer driving distances.

No help for nickel, cobalt

The shift to hybrids is expected to curb demand for key battery materials such as cobalt and nickel, since hybrid batteries are smaller than those in EVs.

The weighted average battery size for PHEVs for the first half of this year was 23.3 kilowatt hours (kWh), versus 64.5 kWh for pure battery EVs (BEVs), according to consultancy CRU.

“The shift towards PHEVs and the pullback of BEV targets is likely to be an overall negative to battery material demand growth over the next few years,” said Sam Adham, head of battery materials at CRU.

Reuters Graphics

(By Eric Onstad and Polina Devitt; Editing by Veronica Brown and Mark Potter)

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Sibanye flags loss after $420 million US asset writedown https://www.mining.com/web/sibanye-flags-loss-after-420-million-us-asset-writedown/ https://www.mining.com/web/sibanye-flags-loss-after-420-million-us-asset-writedown/#respond Mon, 02 Sep 2024 16:05:56 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1159459 Sibanye Stillwater on Monday said it will report a half-year loss hurt by a 7.5 billion rand ($420 million) writedown on its US assets reflecting sliding palladium prices.

The South African miner expects to report a loss per share

of between 2.508 rand and 2.772 rand for the six months to June 30 after posting a profit of 2.62 rand per share for the period last year.

Sibanye said its earnings were impacted by the impairment of its two US mines, which predominantly produce palladium. The US operations produced 238,139 ounces of palladium and platinum in the first half of 2024.

The writedown was “primarily due to lower medium- to long-term forecast consensus palladium price assumptions that resulted in a decrease in expected future net cash flows”, Sibanye said in a trading statement.

There had been a 5% to 8% reduction in medium to long-term market consensus palladium price forecasts assumed for valuation purposes, Sibanye said.

The long-term prospects of PGMs have dimmed as the auto sector switches its focus to electric vehicles.

The price of palladium, which along with other platinum group metals (PGMs) is used in vehicle exhaust systems to curb emissions, fell 40% in 2023 and is down 10% this year.

Sibanye said in the half year it saw a 30% decline in the average dollar price for its US metal and a 28% decline in the rand basket price for its southern African PGMs, significantly reducing revenue.

In 2023, Sibanye reported a $2 billion loss after taking $2.6 billion impairments at its US palladium mines, a nickel operation in France and a gold mine in South Africa.

Sibanye’s peers Impala Platinum and Northam Platinum have recently raised concerns about the country’s platinum industry’s long-term prospects due to the metal price slump.

Sibanye will release its financial results on Sept 12.

($1 = 17.8435 rand)

(By Nelson Banya; Editing by Jason Neely)

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Northam Platinum profit drops on weak prices as output rises https://www.mining.com/web/northam-platinum-profit-drops-on-weak-prices-as-output-rises/ https://www.mining.com/web/northam-platinum-profit-drops-on-weak-prices-as-output-rises/#respond Fri, 30 Aug 2024 14:29:08 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1159350 Northam Platinum posts profit dip as costs surge
Zondereinde, the world’s deepest platinum mine. (Image courtesy of Northam Platinum.)

Northam Platinum Holdings Ltd. said profit fell almost 30% in the last fiscal year as lower prices countered higher production at the South African miner.

Northam – a smaller rival to Anglo American Platinum Ltd., Impala Platinum Holdings Ltd. and Sibanye Stillwater Ltd. – said the average price received for platinum-group metals declined sharply during the period, including a 38% drop for palladium and a 61% slump for rhodium.

Platinum miners in South Africa – the largest producer of the metal – have been cutting costs and shelving expansion projects after the industry flipped from a boom in the early part of the decade to a slump as prices fell. Unlike the three bigger firms, which have scrapped thousands of jobs, Northam marginally increased its workforce last year as it is ramping up annual output of platinum-group metals from its three mines toward 1 million ounces.

Consistent production growth “continues to underpin our defensive position and resilience in the face of the current soft metal price environment,” Northam said. PGM output rose 10% last year to 893,000 ounces.

The PGM industry in South Africa, however, “is not sustainable” at current prices, with production from the country’s “aged and underinvested” mines set to decline in the coming years, Northam chief executive officer Paul Dunne said after the company released its results. Impala CEO Nico Muller made similar remarks a day earlier, saying it’s “highly improbable” there will be investment in new assets.

Johannesburg-based Northam posted earnings of 1.8 billion rand ($101.3 million) in the 12 months through June, down from 2.6 billion rand the previous year, according to a statement released on Friday. The decline would have been sharper, but profit in fiscal 2023 was cut by impairments of 6.8 billion rand on one of the firm’s mines and its investment in Royal Bafokeng Platinum Ltd., which was part of an abortive takeover bid.

Northam declined over 9% in Johannesburg trading.

Revenue fell 22%, but the contribution of chrome — extracted as a byproduct of platinum mining — increased significantly to a tenth of total sales. Profit before some one-time items – known as headline earnings – fell almost 82% to 1.7 billion rand.

Devices used to curb emissions from gasoline and diesel vehicles are a major source of PGM demand. Producers of the metals are focused on finding alternative long-term applications for PGMs as electric vehicles increase their market share.

(By William Clowes)

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Nornickel examining impact of latest US sanctions https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-examining-impact-of-latest-us-sanctions/ https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-examining-impact-of-latest-us-sanctions/#respond Mon, 26 Aug 2024 13:54:54 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1158908 Russian mining giant Nornickel said on Monday it was examining the implications of new US sanctions on its subsidiaries, which are not involved in the company’s production and sales.

On Aug. 23, the United States imposed sanctions on several Nornickel subsidiaries as well as on the Bystrinsky copper and gold project, which Nornickel controls.

These companies were listed among 400 entities and individuals “whose products and services enable Russia to sustain its war effort and evade sanctions,” according to the US Treasury Department.

“The group’s production and sales companies (PJSC MMC Norilsk Nickel, its Polar Division and subsidiaries, Kola MMC and its subsidiaries) were not included in the US sanctions list dated August 23, 2024,” the company said in a statement.

“A number of the group’s service companies were included in the sanctions list. The company’s management is assessing the impact of the imposed sanctions,” it added.

Nornickel, the world’s largest producer of palladium and a major producer of high-grade nickel, is not subject to direct Western sanctions.

However, sanctions against Moscow prompted some Western producers to avoid buying Russian metal and complicated payments, prompting Nornickel to redirect sales to Asia and to try to transfer some final stages of its production out of the country.

In its statement, the company did not mention the sanctions against the Bystrinsky plant, in which Nornickel indirectly owns 50.01%.

According to the latest available data at the end of 2023, Bystrinsky’s other shareholders included Nornickel’s major shareholder Interros Holding with 36.66% and a subsidiary of a Chinese private equity firm Hopu with another 13.33%.

The remote project, located in Russia’s Far East, includes gold, copper and iron ore deposits as well as a processing plant. The products are mainly supplied to China.

(By Anastasia Lyrchikova; Editing by Gleb Bryanski and Mark Potter)

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Nornickel’s first-half profit slumps 22% on weak prices https://www.mining.com/web/nornickels-first-half-profit-slumps-22-on-weak-prices/ https://www.mining.com/web/nornickels-first-half-profit-slumps-22-on-weak-prices/#respond Fri, 23 Aug 2024 14:32:42 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1158755 Nornickel reported a first-half profit on Friday that fell 22%, hurt by weak nickel prices, while the Russian miner also grappled with logistical difficulties and issues related to cross-border payments.

Russian companies have reported delays and cancellations of payments for goods with major trading partners such as China, as local banks strengthen their compliance efforts under pressure from Western regulators.

“The decline in nickel and palladium prices, logistical difficulties in the Red Sea, and increased challenges with cross-border payments have had an extremely negative impact on our revenue, profitability, and free cash flow,” Nornickel CEO Vladimir Potanin said.

The company said maritime traffic restrictions in the Red Sea due to missile and drone attacks by Yemen’s Houthi militants led to accumulation of nickel and copper stocks and a decline in Nornickel’s sales in the first half of the year.

Nornickel uses the Red Sea route to ship metals, including to Asian markets.

Nornickel said average nickel price at the London Metal Exchange fell by 28% in the first half of 2024, and the miner forecast a surplus 100,000 tons of nickel in the global markets in 2024/25.

“Unfortunately, the adverse external conditions that Norilsk Nickel faced last year continued to put pressure on our business in the first half of 2024,” Potanin added.

Nornickel’s revenue fell 22% to $5.6 billion in the first half, while its core earnings decreased 30% to $2.35 billion.

The company also trimmed its capital expenditure forecast for 2024 to $3 billion from its prior view of between $3 billion and $3.20 billion.

Nornickel said the share of Asian markets in its exports stood at 52% for the six-month period.

“Amid conditions of the ‘perfect storm’ created by high interest rates on debt instruments and limited access to capital markets, our absolute priorities are maintaining the financial stability of Norilsk Nickel,” Potanin said.

The company’s free cash flow fell 61% to $525 million in the first half of the year.

Last month, Nornickel, the world’s largest producer of palladium and a major producer of refined nickel, reported a 1% drop in nickel output for the first half, but stuck to its 2024 production forecast for both the metals.

Potanin said that after the repaired furnace at Nornickel’s flagship Nadezhda plant went back into operation this month, the company is now ahead of its production schedule.

Nornickel is not subject to direct Western sanctions, but some Western companies are avoiding dealing with it, hampering its operations.

The United States on Friday imposed sanctions on several Nornickel subsidiaries which are not involved in production as well as on the Bystrinsky copper and gold plant which Nornickel controls. Nornickel declined to comment on new sanctions.

(By Anastasia Lyrchikova and Gleb Bryanski; Editing by Shounak Dasgupta and Jonathan Oatis)

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Sibanye finalizes $101m gold prepayment deal, refinances credit facility https://www.mining.com/web/sibanye-finalizes-101m-gold-prepayment-deal-refinances-credit-facility/ https://www.mining.com/web/sibanye-finalizes-101m-gold-prepayment-deal-refinances-credit-facility/#respond Wed, 21 Aug 2024 14:23:49 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1158530 South Africa’s Sibanye Stillwater has finalized a 1.8 billion rand ($101 million) gold prepayment deal to raise cash to help repay loans after a slump in platinum group metal (PGM) prices hurt its income, the diversified miner said on Wednesday.

The group had previously said it was seeking to raise more than $500 million through metals prepayment deals to shore up its balance sheet after earnings plunged due to the PGM price collapse.

Metals prepayment arrangements allow miners to sell their future production in return for an upfront cash payment.

The metals producer’s profits tumbled $2 billion last year due to lower prices and after it wrote down $2.6 billion in the carrying value of its US palladium mines, a nickel operation in France and a gold mine in South Africa.

Sibanye Stillwater CEO Neal Froneman said in a statement on Wednesday the prepayment deal was a “proactive, strategic financing alternative that improves the group’s liquidity and balance sheet”.

Sibanye said it would deliver 1,497 kg of gold in equal monthly tranches from October 2024 to November 2026 in return for the prepaid cash. The cash will help to repay the group’s loans, it said.

The miner said it had also reached an agreement to refinance and increase its 5.5 billion rand revolving credit facility with South African lenders, which was due to mature in November 2024.

Refinancing allows a borrower to replace an existing debt obligation with a new one on more favourable terms.

The refinanced 6 billion rand facility will now mature in August 2027, with an option to extend it by a further two years, Sibanye said.

($1 = 17.8542 rand)

(By Nelson Banya; Editing by Emelia Sithole-Matarise)

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Anglo American to receive coal bids in September https://www.mining.com/anglo-american-to-receive-coal-bids-in-september/ Tue, 20 Aug 2024 11:02:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1158416 Anglo American (LON: AAL) is said to have set September 9 as the date it will begin receiving bids for its Australian metallurgical coal mines, which analysts estimated to be worth up to $5 billion, before a fire at Grosvenor in June that shut the mine.

The sale is part of a comprehensive sweeping restructuring program triggered by a failed takeover attempt by its larger rival BHP (ASX, LON, NYSE: BHP). The explosion and subsequent fire at the company’s Grosvenor coal mine in Queensland rose questions about the process. Anglo continued as planned, enlisting the services of three top banks in July to assist in the sale.

Bids will be open for Anglo’s Grosvenor and Moranbah North mines, as well as three smaller mines in Queensland, according to two unnamed sources cited by Reuters.

Analysts predict that potential bidders may include Glencore (LON: GLEN), already a major supplier of Australian coal, Indonesian companies and Yancoal (ASX: YAL), which operates several coal mines in the country. 

Glencore recently abandoned plans to spin off its coal unit following discussions with shareholders, who pushed back against the move. The Swiss miner and commodities trader’s business has long been centred around the fossil fuel, and the prospect of abandoning it seemed improbable for a company built on the commodity.

Following the announcement, chief executive Gary Nagle said the company would even consider buying more steelmaking coal assets, given they were “fair priced” and located in “the right place”.

A group of Indonesian companies led by Golden Energy and Resources is reportedly considering making an offer. Delta Dunia Group, a Jakarta-listed company that operates the BUMA coal mining services business in Australia, announced in July its intention to expand through acquisitions.

China-backed Yancoal is another strong candidate to bid for Anglo’s assets. The miner said on Monday it was on the hunt for metallurgical coal deals in Australia, backed by A$1.5 billion ($1bn) in available funds. If successful, the move would position Yancoal as one of the nation’s top producers, capitalizing on rising demand across Asia.

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Stillwater Critical collaborates with Berkeley Lab on geologic hydrogen production https://www.mining.com/stillwater-critical-collaborates-with-berkeley-lab-on-geologic-hydrogen-production/ Thu, 15 Aug 2024 20:26:38 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1158132 Stillwater Critical Minerals (TSXV: PGE) is collaborating with Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory to study the potential for geologic hydrogen production at its flagship nickel-PGE-copper-cobalt project in Montana.

Geologic hydrogen refers to hydrogen gas that occurs naturally within the Earth’s crust, generated through natural processes such as the reaction of water with certain types of iron-rich rocks. The company’s Stillwater West project is situated within the iconic Stillwater mining district, which hosts layered ultramafic rocks that provide favorable settings for geologic hydrogen accumulation.

The Berkeley Lab has secured funding in the amount of $2 million from the US Department of Energy via the Advanced Research Projects Agency program (ARPA-E) for this study.

The research, known as Cyclic Injection for Commercial Seismic-Safe Geologic H2 Production (CyclicGeoH2)” project, will be led by Berkeley Lab research scientist Dr. Mengsu Hu in collaboration with the University of California at Berkeley and the University of Texas at Austin.

Dr. Hu’s research focuses on multiscale numerical modeling and machine learning for analyzing coupled thermal-hydro-mechanical-chemical (THMC) processes from fundamental Earth science to subsurface energy geoscience applications.

For this study, the research team is developing technologies for geologic hydrogen production that address the challenge of extracting hydrogen both safely and economically at commercial scale. It involves the use of adaptive controls of fracture creation followed by serpentinization reactions to generate and subsequently extract hydrogen to a wellhead.

Using rock samples from the Stillwater igneous complex, the team is applying an integrated approach for developing and testing novel technology that includes laboratory tests, field characterization and multiscale numerical modeling. The research effort in the project will benefit from studies conducted by other projects supported by ARPA-E that are focusing on the enhancement of the rate of geologic hydrogen generation.

“We are excited for our Stillwater West project to be selected for this cutting-edge work in the burgeoning field of geologic hydrogen generation,” stated Michael Rowley, Stillwater Critical’s CEO. “We look forward to continued work with Dr. Hu’s team given our shared vision of securing domestic supply of the critical minerals so urgently needed by the US while also potentially generating clean energy in the form of hydrogen based on the rare geology of the Stillwater igneous complex.”

Its Stillwater project currently contains five Platreef-style nickel and copper sulphide deposits hosting a total of 1.6 billion pounds of nickel, copper and cobalt, and 3.8 million ounces of palladium, platinum, rhodium and gold.

“With the largest nickel resource in an active US mining district and a wealth of other minerals listed as critical by the US government, Stillwater Critical Minerals is exceptionally well-positioned to play a significant role in achieving these goals as we continue to advance Stillwater West as a large-scale, low-carbon source of at least nine minerals listed as critical,” he added.

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Video: ‘Grade smearing’ the top industry disclosure flaw, Brent Cook says https://www.mining.com/video-grade-smearing-the-top-industry-disclosure-flaw-brent-cook-says/ Wed, 14 Aug 2024 20:05:58 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1158061 Retail investors can struggle to make sense of drill results, but some junior mining explorers make things worse with misleading reporting practices that inflate the value of their projects, industry veteran Brent Cook says.

One such practice investors should watch out for is ‘grade smearing.’ That’s when companies stretch high-grade results over larger intervals to create the illusion of more substantial findings, the economic geologist and adviser to the Exploration Insights newsletter explained.

“Most of what we do is try and find the fatal flaw as soon as possible,” Cook said last month during the Rule Symposium in Boca Raton, Fla. “We know most of these companies aren’t going to find anything economic.”

Cook also discusses the worrying trend of traditional mining investors retreating and younger investors turning to tech stocks, leaving the sector underfunded.

Watch the full interview with The Northern Miner’s western editor, Henry Lazenby.

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Northam Platinum warns of profit fall as low PGM prices persist https://www.mining.com/web/northam-platinum-warns-of-profit-fall-as-low-pgm-prices-persist/ https://www.mining.com/web/northam-platinum-warns-of-profit-fall-as-low-pgm-prices-persist/#respond Wed, 14 Aug 2024 16:37:31 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1157995 South Africa’s Northam Platinum warned of a sharp fall in profit on Wednesday, saying it expected an uncertain global economic outlook to keep platinum group metal (PGM) prices low for “some time”.

The company’s share price fell 4% in early trade. The JSE wider index was 0.2% up at 0751 GMT.

It said its headline earnings per share for the year to June 30 could decrease by as much as 87% to between 3.24 rand and 5.66 rand from 24.15 the previous year.

This is mainly due to a 35.5% fall in the rand price for its metals and despite a 7.3% increase in sales volumes, Northam said in a trading statement.

“The current price environment may last for some time and this, combined with higher general inflation, is placing pressure on the entire PGM sector,” Northam said.

Nedbank Group analyst Arnold Van Graan said Northam’s operational performance, which increased refined metal output from its own production by 10%, had lessened the impact of low metal prices and kept unit cost increases below inflation.

“Lower metal prices and growth capex would have weighed on free cashflows; however, the company’s counter-cyclical growth strategy remains in place and is helping offset the impact of weaker PGM prices,” Van Graan said in a note.

Metal prices are an issue across the sector.

Northam’s bigger rival Impala Platinum on Aug.7 said it will report a basic loss of up to 17.8 billion rand after lower metal prices led to $1 billion in impairments because its assets declined in value.

The world’s biggest PGM producer Anglo American Platinum said its profit fell 18% to 6.5 billion rand in the six months to June 30, weighed down by restructuring costs after it cut 3,700 jobs to reduce spending in addition to the impact of lower metal prices.

Northam will release its financial results on Aug. 30.

(By Nelson Banya; Editing by Barbara Lewis)

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Impala Platinum flags $1bn impairments after metal price plunge https://www.mining.com/web/impala-platinum-flags-1-billion-impairments-after-metal-price-plunge/ https://www.mining.com/web/impala-platinum-flags-1-billion-impairments-after-metal-price-plunge/#respond Wed, 07 Aug 2024 14:05:36 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1157281 Impala Platinum said on Wednesday it will report a basic loss of up to 17.8 billion rand ($972.39 million) after suffering $1 billion of impairments due to the decline in the value of its assets on the back of plunging metal prices.

Impala said in a trading update that earnings for the year to June 30 had fallen due to lower revenue arising from a 34% decline in platinum group metal prices realized over the period.

Basic earnings for the period were affected by impairments of 16.5 billion rand at Impala’s flagship Rustenburg operations, 1.6 billion rand at Impala Canada and 686 million rand at the Mimosa joint venture with Sibanye Stillwater in Zimbabwe.

A further 987 million rand decline in the carrying value of assets was recognized at Impala’s Two Rivers joint venture with African Rainbow Minerals in South Africa.

Impala said it expects headline earnings of between 1.9 billion rand and 2.8 billion rand, up to 90% lower than last year’s 18.8 billion rand.

Headline earnings were hurt by a once-off, non-cash charge of 1.9 billion rand arising from the implementation of a share-based empowerment transaction benefiting previously disadvantaged entities including Impala Bafokeng employees, communities and a Black-owned consortium of investors.

Impala will publish its financial results on Aug. 29.

($1 = 18.3054 rand)

(By Nelson Banya)

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Generation Mining advances on permitting for PGM-copper mine in Ontario https://www.mining.com/generation-mining-advances-on-permitting-for-pgm-copper-mine-in-ontario/ Wed, 31 Jul 2024 19:02:54 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1156872 Generation Mining (TSX: GENM) has moved one step closer to building North America’s next PGM (platinum group metals) and copper mine after securing approval for construction of key infrastructures.

On Wednesday, the company announced that the federal government has approved amendments to the Metal and Diamond Mining Effluent Regulations — effectively allowing the construction of specific water management structure at its Marathon mine site in Ontario.

The milestone follows the approval by the Ontario government of the mine’s closure plan last November, as well as the environmental approvals obtained before that.

Receipt of the few remaining approvals and permits (provincial and federal) required for construction is expected in the coming months, Generation Mining said in a news release.

“We are now on the cusp of having one of the only permitted copper and PGM projects in North America that can be constructed and brought into operation once we obtain the requisite financing,” CEO Jamie Levy said.

“The Marathon project is one of the most advanced critical mineral projects in Canada, and this government approval represents another milestone on the path to developing Canada’s next copper and palladium mine,” Levy added.

According to a new feasibility study released this year, the Marathon project in northwestern Ontario is expected to produce an average of 166,000 oz. of payable palladium and 41 million lb. of payable copper annually over a 13-year mine life.

The study estimated an after-tax net present value (using a 6% discount rate) of C$1.16 billion, an internal rate of return of 25.8%, and a 2.3-year payback. Initial capital costs of the project are pegged at C$1.11 billion.

Generation Mining’s stock surged 11.5% by 3 p.m. ET following the latest development. This gave the company a market capitalization of approximately C$68.5 million ($49.3m).

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Nornickel sticks to production outlook despite furnace repairs https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-sticks-to-production-outlook-despite-furnace-repairs/ https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-sticks-to-production-outlook-despite-furnace-repairs/#respond Mon, 29 Jul 2024 13:58:06 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1156558 Russia’s Nornickel, the world’s largest producer of palladium and a major producer of refined nickel, reported on Monday a 1% drop in nickel output for the first half of the year, but kept its 2024 production guidance for both metals.

The company said in a statement its full-year nickel production forecast remained at 184,000-194,000 metric tons, compared with 209,000 in 2023. It kept its 2024 palladium production guidance at 2.296-2.451 million ounces.

Nornickel said the dip in first-half nickel output was due to furnace repairs at its Nadezhda smelter.

“Upon completion, combined with the overhaul of the converter electric furnace and peripheral equipment, the reliability of industrial assets will be improved,” chief operations officer Alexander Popov said in the statement.

Nornickel is not subject to direct Western sanctions, but some Western companies are avoiding dealing with it.

That has hampered the company. For example, it had to postpone 30 billion roubles ($347 million) of repairs for two years as it struggled to source equipment and technology previously provided by Western companies.

The repaired furnace will return to operation in early August, suggesting Nornickel has found ways to overcome the problem. It did not disclose its new equipment suppliers.

In April, the United States and Britain banned their metal-trading exchanges from accepting new nickel, aluminum and copper produced by Russia and barred imports of the metals to try to disrupt Russia’s export revenues.

Nornickel said this would further increase price volatility and supply uncertainty, but pledged to fulfil all its contractual obligations.

Like many other Russian companies, Nornickel is pivoting to China and other non-Western countries in search of technology and new markets for its products.

The company is in talks to move its copper smelting to China, to build a nickel plant for the battery sector in China, and plans to build a platinum group metals refinery in Bahrain.

Nornickel said its palladium production was little changed in the first six month of 2024, while platinum output fell 3%.

($1 = 86.4000 roubles)

(By Gleb Bryanski)

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Sibanye delays results release as it recovers from cyberattack https://www.mining.com/sibanye-delays-results-release-as-it-recovers-from-cyberattack/ Thu, 25 Jul 2024 16:56:56 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1156334 Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE: SSW, NYSE: SBSW) will delay the release of its operating and financial results for the period ended June 30, 2024, due to the recent disruptions to its IT systems.

On July 11, the South African miner announced there had been a cyberattack that brought down the company’s servers, causing disruptions to certain areas of its global operations. An investigation was launched and remains ongoing.

In a statement Thursday, Sibanye said it has taken measures to enhance IT security and implemented a phased system start-up approach to ensure that its mining operations can continue globally with minimal disruption.

“We have prioritized the health and safety of our employees as we have worked diligently to remediate the effects of the attack and normalize our operations,” CEO Neal Froneman said in a news release.

“We are pleased to have largely secured the sustainability and integrity of our systems and continue to work closely with our customers and suppliers to mitigate any potential business interruptions that may occur in the short term,” he said.

So far, only the US-based platinum group metals operation experienced some short-term operational delays, due to IT outages affecting the smelting of underground concentrate and the recycling of spent autocatalysts. However, it is expected to quickly resume full operations, with accumulated stockpiles expected to be processed in due course, Sibanye said.

Although the cyberattack has had limited impact on the group’s core operations, it still caused temporary system outages that resulted in the implementation of back-up manual processes on certain systems. While the systems are now largely restored, Sibanye has rescheduled the publication of its second quarter and first half results to September 12.

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Anglo American takes fresh $1.6bn writedown on UK fertilizer mine https://www.mining.com/anglo-american-takes-fresh-1-6bn-writedown-on-uk-fertilizer-mine/ Thu, 25 Jul 2024 10:46:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1156316 Anglo American (LON: AAL) swung to a loss in the first half of the year after taking a fresh $1.6 billion writedown on its Woodsmith fertilizer project in the UK, adding challenges to the company’s ongoing overhaul that involves shedding four units.

Anglo announced the restructuring strategy in May after successfully fending off a $49 billion takeover bid from BHP (ASX:BHP), the world’s largest mining company. The 18-month plan focuses on exiting diamond mining by divesting its De Beers unit, separating its platinum operations, and selling its coal mines.

The company attributed the impairment at Woodsmith to a decision to “temporarily slow down” development of the project, which Anglo rescued from collapse four years ago. Anglo took a $1.7 billion hit last year due to a prolonged timeline and higher costs at the mine, which will produce polyhalite — a new type of organic fertilizer that has not yet been tested at scale.

Regarding its coal assets, the company will conduct a two-stage auction process, which has been delayed by a major fire at the Grosvenor mine. Anglo said the Queensland, Australia asset would probably only resume operations under a new owner.

“We are transforming Anglo American by focusing on our world-class asset base in copper, premium iron ore and crop nutrients,” chief executive Duncan Wanblad said in the statement. “As we progress our portfolio transformation, we expect to substantially reduce our overhead and other non-operational costs in phases, but weighted towards the end of the process to minimize business risk.”

Core divisions excel

Revenue in the half year to June 2024 fell by 8% to $14.5 billion while underlying profits were down by 23% to $1.29 billion. Net losses were $672 million, compared to a profit of $1.26 billion a year ago.

About 70% of the earnings came from copper and iron ore, the two divisions Anglo is keeping, along with Woodsmith.

Wanblad said he was “very encouraged” by the company’s “strong” operational performance. “[We] delivered steady volumes and a 4% improvement in unit costs, while still facing weak cyclical markets for platinum group metals and diamonds,” he said.

The results beat analyst consensus forecast thanks to a stronger-than-expected performance from the copper division. The interim dividend of $0.42/share was also higher than market estimates by 9%, BMO metals and mining analyst Alexander Pearce wrote on Thursday. 

“All things considered, this appears to be a positive set of results from Anglo,” said Christopher LaFemina, analyst at Jefferies. Still, there are “relatively high risks associated with the company’s proposed restructuring plan,” he noted.

The company reiterated 2024 production and cost guidance for most of the portfolio, but lowered De Beers’ expected production for the second time this year to 23-26 million carats from 26-29 million carats previously.

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Deep-sea miner TMC plans to be ready to apply for licence https://www.mining.com/deep-sea-miner-tmc-ready-to-apply-for-licence/ https://www.mining.com/deep-sea-miner-tmc-ready-to-apply-for-licence/#comments Wed, 24 Jul 2024 12:43:00 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?p=1156201 Canada’s The Metals Company (NASDAQ: TMC) plans to be ready to apply for a licence to start mining the seabed before the end of this year, with production expected to start at the end of the first quarter of 2026.

TMC, a deep-sea mining pioneer, has long said it would submit its application after the United Nations’ International Seabed Authority (ISA) current meeting, which ends on July 26.

Gathered in Kingston, Jamaica, the 36-member ISA council is negotiating the latest draft of the anticipated seabed mining rules.

“We’ve told the market that we would lodge (our application) after the July (ISA) session [and] we see no reason to change that,” chief executive Gerard Barron told Reuters.

“From our perspective, what we’re looking for out of the current session is continual movement towards finalizing the regulations,” Barron told the news agency.

The ISA is currently meeting in Kingston, Jamaica to negotiate a draft “mining code” that will regulate the activity. The council has been reviewing the 225-page document produced in February and making adjustments as they proceed, TMC told reporters last week in a market briefing. 

“We’ve told the market that we would lodge (our application) after the July (ISA) session [and] we see no reason to change that”

TMC chief executive Gerard Barron

The Vancouver-headquartered firm also said in the online update that based on feedback received from ISA and stakeholders in 2023, they are running new environmental tests in the area they plan to mine.

Barron’s comments to Reuters are in contrast to what the TMC told attendees last week. The company said then it would not rush a submission for a mining licence, as the results of tests have not come back yet. 

These conclusions would be key to finish the Environmental Impact Study (EIS) and Environmental Monitoring and Management Plan (EMMP) TMC is currently working on.

“We will do it once and we will do it right,” company representatives said about applying for a mining permit, adding that TMC may not submit the application now after all.

After submission, the permit request will undergo a review process that is anticipated to last for one year.

Years of exploration

TMC has been actively carrying out exploratory mining expeditions to the mineral-rich Clarion-Clipperton Zone (CCZ) – a vast area between Hawaii and Mexico, where polymetallic nodules the size of potatoes were discovered more than 120 years ago.

The company will scoop up those nodules in a process they say is less damaging than land-based mining.

A study published this week may throw a new wrench into TMC and other companies’ plans. Experts found metallic nodules produce “dark oxygen” — oxygen generated without using sunlight, as it is on the Earth’s surface via photosynthesis — and warned that extracting these nodules could negatively affect the seafloor ecosystem.

The paper follows a formal complaint filed this week against TMC by three civil society groups with the US Securities and Exchange Commission.

Deep Sea Mining Campaign (DSMC), The Ocean Foundation (TOF) and Blue Climate Initiative (BCI) allege the company has significantly mislead investors, government officials and the public through material misrepresentations and omissions.

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Amplats says on track to demerge in 2025, plans secondary London listing https://www.mining.com/web/amplats-says-on-track-to-demerge-in-2025-plans-secondary-london-listing/ https://www.mining.com/web/amplats-says-on-track-to-demerge-in-2025-plans-secondary-london-listing/#respond Mon, 22 Jul 2024 13:55:30 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1155927 South Africa’s Anglo American Platinum (Amplats) expects its demerger from parent company Anglo American to be completed next year and is planning a secondary listing in London, its CEO said on Monday.

Amplats, which reported first half results, also said it had cut some 3,700 jobs to reduce spending ahead of the demerger.

Meeting cost targets and the unbundling plan are crucial for efforts by Anglo American CEO Duncan Wanblad to restructure the wider group – after fending off a $49 billion takeover bid from rival mining giant BHP Group.

Amplats CEO Craig Miller said the standalone business would have brighter prospects.

“The planned demerger will create a more focused, independent global leader in the PGM industry,” Miller said, adding that a secondary listing would diversify its investors.

Amplats’ profit fell 18% to 6.5 billion rand ($355.4 million) in the six months to June 30, while it declared a dividend of 9.75 rand per share, amounting to a total of 2.6 billion rand, in the first half.

The wider Anglo group is due to report first half results on July 25, with investors hoping for a progress update.

Anglo has been battling an underground fire at one of its Australian coal mines since June 29, which could affect the way investors value the assets. Anglo’s sale of the coal assets is seen by investors as instrumental to raising capital.

“Anglo’s main problem this reporting period will be with the coal operations and how it will sell a burning coal mine,” said Ian Woodley, a portfolio manager at Old Mutual.

A spokesperson for Anglo said the coal assets sale had attracted strong demand from various investors.

“The sale process is well under way and there is strong interest in this world class set of steelmaking coal assets from a large number of parties,” the spokesperson said.

($1 = 18.2898 rand)

(By Felix Njini, Melanie Burton, Nelson Banya and Clara Denina; Editing by Louise Heavens, David Goodman and Alexander Smith)

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Nornickel weighs projects in new top market China https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-weighs-projects-in-new-top-market-china/ https://www.mining.com/web/nornickel-weighs-projects-in-new-top-market-china/#respond Thu, 18 Jul 2024 18:52:47 +0000 https://www.mining.com/?post_type=syndicatedcontent&p=1155761 Russia’s biggest miner MMC Norilsk Nickel PJSC is weighing several new projects in copper, nickel and palladium in China as sanctions make cross-border payments and shipments increasingly difficult.

Nornickel executives held talks with potential Chinese partners this month and signed about ten memorandums of understanding, covering the whole group of metals the miner makes, two people familiar with situation said, asking not to be identified as the information is private.

While Nornickel has not been directly sanctioned by either the US or the European Union, its operations have been impacted by wider restrictions since Moscow’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The London Metal exchange barred new deliveries of Russian metal this year.

Most European and all US banks stopped funding Russian metals’ deals, while some clients decided not to continue trading with the country. That made China the biggest export market for Nornickel since 2023, accounting for over a half of its sales.

Trading with China has become more complicated this year. In June, the US widened its secondary sanctions criteria by broadening the definition of Russia’s military-industrial base, leaving Chinese banks more reluctant to serve Russian transactions.

Nornickel already said in April that it plans to set up a copper plant and joint venture with a local player in China, marking an “out-of-the-box solution” to sanctions risks. The company plans to complete the plant by mid-2027 and ship copper concentrate to China through the Northern Sea Route.

The talks held last week were centered around this project, but also covered others, including building a nickel plant for battery producers, the people said. Discussions about the nickel plant were reported by Reuters on Thursday.

A spokesperson for Nornickel declined to comment.

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