By June 9, 2016 Read More →

Electric vehicles to power cobalt revival

Cobalt a key component of lithium-ion batteries

Electric car

With an increase in the number of electric cars expected, analysts believe the price of cobalt, a key component of lithium-ion batteries, will rise by by 45 per cent by 2020.

By Pratima Desai

LONDON, June 8 (Reuters) – Cobalt prices may be on the threshold of a major revival due to flourishing demand for the mineral, a key component of lithium-ion batteries used in electric cars.

Prices are expected to rise 45 percent to above $16 a pound by 2020 from $11 now as stricter emissions controls boost demand for electric vehicles and push the market into deficit from this year, analysts said.

Consultants CRU Group say electric car and plug-in hybrid vehicle sales could top 17 million in 2030, assuming an average growth rate of 25 percent a year from 2016 to 2030.

That compares with sales of 540,000 electric cars last year and 750,000 this year based on year-to-date sales.

“Demand for cobalt in non-metallurgical (chemical) uses such as in batteries will grow at more than 7.5 percent a year to 2020,” said CRU senior consultant Edward Spencer.

“Chemical demand growth will be buoyed by the electric vehicle sector growing out of its infancy and the lithium-ion sector for other applications also growing robustly.”

Lithium-ion batteries are also used in mobile phones, laptops, digital cameras, cordless drills and hedge trimmers.

Amounts of cobalt used in these batteries vary, but larger quantities typically mean enhanced performance.

Lithium nickel manganese cobalt oxide and lithium nickel cobalt aluminum oxide are two compounds used in batteries for electric vehicles.

China’s electric car market is expected to grow at a faster pace than in the rest of the world. It is already the world’s largest consumer of cobalt, accounting for nearly 40 percent of global demand estimated at around 90,000 tonnes this year.

Roughly 60 percent of the world’s cobalt comes from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

STAMPEDE FOR COBALT RESOURCES

China has few cobalt resources and that is why the State Reserves Bureau (SRB) bought 2,200 tonnes of the metal late last year and is in the process of acquiring another 2,800 tonnes, traders say. The SRB declined to comment.

China’s scramble for cobalt resources over coming years can be seen in a deal announced last month where Freeport-McMoRan Inc agreed to sell its majority stake in a unit controlling the Tenke copper project in the DRC to China Molybdenum for $2.65 billion.

“Tenke is one of biggest cobalt ore bodies on the planet, we think the real reason behind the purchase was security of supply for China,” said Investec analyst Jeremy Wrathall.

Also highlighting cobalt’s potential over coming years is the U.S. Defense Logistics Agency starting to stockpile cobalt compounds, seen as “strategic and critical”.

CRU’s Spencer sees global cobalt demand at approximately 120,000 tonnes in 2020, whereas Macquarie analysts see it at 107,000 tonnes. Both, however, forecast similar deficits in excess of 7,000 tonnes at the end of 2020.

“Cobalt’s demand growth profile remains one of the best among industrial metals peers. Its exposure to rechargeable batteries continues to play a crucial role,” Macquarie analysts said in a note.

Rising supplies from ramp ups at mines such as Ambatovy and a return to full production at Katanga are expected to limit the deficit between now and 2020, but much depends on nickel prices.

“If nickel prices stay low, we could see more nickel mines (which also produce cobalt) being mothballed,” a cobalt trader based in Europe said.

About 60 percent of cobalt production is a byproduct of copper, 30 percent is a byproduct of nickel and 10 percent comes from primary sources.

Copper miners have managed to keep producing in the face of low prices by cutting costs.

(Reporting by Pratima Desai; Editing by Veronica Brown and Philippa Fletcher)

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