Correction: Decarbonisation to boost metals demand

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 30/04/20

Amends paragraph 4 to clarify that Europe has largely phased out the use of rare earth magnets in onshore wind farms but they are still used in offshore and can be recycled, and that electrification of the transport sector is the strongest demand driver for rare earths in Europe and globally.

Moves towards low-carbon economies are expected to "drastically" increase demand for metals used in renewable energy technologies. But supply chain vulnerabilities could jeopardise these plans, according to the European Commission.

The EU's legally binding 2030 climate change targets and global commitments to limit greenhouse gas emissions are likely to result in the rapid deployment of wind and solar photovoltaic (PV) technologies, so consumption of raw materials necessary to manufacture wind turbines and solar panels should rise sharply in the coming years, according to the commission's report.

The commission considered three factors — the likely lifetime of new renewable plants, sub-technology market share and materials intensity — to establish low, medium and high-demand projections.

Rare earths demand for onshore wind to soar

For wind turbines, demand is expected to rise for structural materials such as concrete, steel, plastic, glass, aluminium, chromium, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum, nickel and zinc. Consumption of technology-specific materials such as rare-earth elements and minor metals will also grow.

According to the commission's report, the EU onshore wind sector will see the biggest increase in demand, especially for rare earths dysprosium, neodymium, praseodymium and terbium, which are used in permanent magnet-based turbines. However, some market participants question the commission's projections, noting that Europe has largely phased out the use of rare earth magnets in onshore wind farms but that they are still used in offshore and can be recycled. Electrification of the transport sector is the strongest demand driver for rare earths in Europe and globally.

In the commission's high-demand scenario, EU consumption of these rare earths could increase sixfold between 2018 and 2030 and 15-fold by 2050. Based on the EU's 2050 decarbonisation targets, Europe alone would require most of the neodymium, praseodymium, dysprosium and terbium currently available globally, if all the extra wind turbines envisaged were to be built.

For the rest of the world, the high-demand scenario envisages consumption of rare earths for wind turbines rising by a factor of 8-9 between 2018 and 2030, and by a factor of 11-14 between 2018 and 2050.

Demand within the EU from the offshore wind sector is expected to rise less sharply, but the opposite will be true for the rest of the world — largely because globally the sector lags behind Europe.

Efficiency to cap demand from solar

In the EU's solar sector, structural material consumption doubles under the low-demand scenario and rises by a factor of 21 in the high-demand scenario. In the report's most severe projection, EU demand rises eight-fold by 2030 and 30-fold by 2050.

But for technology-specific materials, consumption falls in the low-demand scenario because of efficiency gains and the resulting drop in material intensity.

And the medium-demand scenario, a balance between capacity deployment and material intensities results in consumption of gallium, germanium, indium and selenium rising most sharply, but consumption of silver falling because of enhanced material efficiencies.

In the high-demand scenario, cadmium, gallium, indium, selenium and tellurium consumption grows by up to 40 times by 2050. The strongest demand in 2050 is expected to be for germanium — up to 86 times higher than in 2018.

EU demand for silicon is expected to double by 2030 and to quadruple by 2050 under the medium scenario, and increase seven-fold by 2030 and 13-fold by 2050 under the high-demand scenario.

Supply-chain stress

Limits on raw material availability could threaten decarbonisation efforts.

The report calls for government efforts to ensure stable and secure supplies, noting that Europe is largely dependent on imports for many raw materials. "The EU's transition to green energy technologies... could be endangered by weaknesses in future supply security for several materials, such as germanium, tellurium, gallium, indium, selenium, silicon and glass for solar PV, and rare earth elements for wind turbine technologies."

No rare earths are mined in the EU, so the bloc depends on the world's leading producer, China, to supply these critical materials. The Covid-19 pandemic and China's resulting border restrictions have led to a heightened awareness of weaknesses in supply chains.

The report also call for replacement for materials currently used to manufacture wind turbines, arguing that this would allow supply diversification.

And the report highlights the fact that the main global producers and suppliers of certain critical materials are concentrated in countries with a poor level of governance — something that increases risks related to supply security and environmental and social problems.


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03/05/24

Brazil's Gerdau eyes special steel mill in Mexico

Brazil's Gerdau eyes special steel mill in Mexico

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US job growth nearly halved in April: Update


03/05/24
03/05/24

US job growth nearly halved in April: Update

Adds services PMI in first, fifth paragraphs, factory PMI reference in sixth paragraph. Houston, 3 May (Argus) — The US added fewer jobs in April as the unemployment rate ticked up and average earnings growth slowed, signs of gradually weakening labor market conditions. A separate survey showed the services sector contracted last month. The US added 175,000 jobs in April, the Labor Department reported today, fewer than the 238,000 analysts anticipated. That compared with an upwardly revised 315,000 jobs in March and a downwardly revised 236,000 jobs in February. The unemployment rate ticked up to 3.9pc from 3.8pc. The unemployment rate has ranged from 3.7-3.9pc since August 2023, near the five-decade low of 3.4pc. The latest employment report comes after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday held its target lending rate unchanged for a sixth time and signaled it would be slower in cutting rates from two-decade highs as the labor market has remained "strong" and inflation, even while easing, is "still too high". US stocks opened more than 1pc higher today after the jobs report and the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 4.47pc. Futures markets showed odds of a September rate cut rose by about 10 percentage points to about 70pc after the report. Services weakness Another report today showed the biggest segment of the economy contracted last month. The Institute for Supply Management's (ISM) services purchasing managers index (PMI) fell to 49.4 in April from 51.4 in March, ending 15 months of expansion. The services PMI employment index fell to 45.9, the fourth contraction in five months, in today's report. Readings below 50 signal contraction. On 1 May, ISM reported that the manufacturing PMI fell to 49.2 in April, after one month of growth following 16 months of contraction. In today's employment report from the Labor Department, average hourly earnings grew by 3.9pc over the 12 month period, down from 4.1pc in the period ended in March. Job gains in the 12 months through March averaged 242,000. Gains, including revisions, averaged 276,000 in the prior three-month period. Job gains occurred in health care, social services and transportation and warehousing. Health care added 56,000 jobs, in line with the gains over the prior 12 months. Transportation and warehousing added 22,000, also near the 12-month average. Retail trade added 20,000. Construction added 9,000 following 40,000 in March. Government added 8,000, slowing from an average of 55,000 in the prior 12 months. Manufacturing added 9,000 jobs after posting 4,000 jobs the prior month. Mining and logging lost 3,000 jobs. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US met coal suppliers expect belated supply tensions


03/05/24
03/05/24

US met coal suppliers expect belated supply tensions

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US job growth nearly halved in April


03/05/24
03/05/24

US job growth nearly halved in April

Houston, 3 May (Argus) — The US added fewer jobs in April as the unemployment rate ticked up and average earnings growth fell, signs of gradually weakening labor market conditions. The US added 175,000 jobs in April, the Labor Department reported today, fewer than the 238,000 analysts anticipated. That compared with an upwardly revised 315,000 jobs in March and a downwardly revised 236,000 jobs in February. The unemployment rate ticked up to 3.9pc from 3.8pc. The unemployment rate has ranged from 3.7-3.9pc since August 2023, near the five-decade low of 3.4pc. The latest employment report comes after the Federal Reserve on Wednesday held its target lending rate unchanged for a sixth time and signaled it would be slower in cutting rates from two-decade highs as the labor market has remained "strong" and inflation, even while easing, is "still too high". US stocks opened more than 1pc higher today after the jobs report and the yield on the 10-year Treasury note fell to 4.47pc. Futures markets showed odds of a September rate cut rose by about 10 percentage points to about 70pc after the report. Average hourly earnings grew by 3.9pc over the 12 month period, down from 4.1pc in the period ended in March. Job gains in the 12 months through March averaged 242,000. Gains, including revisions, averaged 276,000 in the prior three-month period. Job gains occurred in health care, social services and transportation and warehousing. Health care added 56,000 jobs, in line with the gains over the prior 12 months. Transportation and warehousing added 22,000, also near the 12-month average. Retail trade added 20,000. Construction added 9,000 following 40,000 in March. Government added 8,000, slowing from an average of 55,000 in the prior 12 months. Manufacturing added 9,000 jobs after posting 4,000 jobs the prior month. Mining and logging lost 3,000 jobs. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2024. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

UK decoiler Atlantic Steel enters administration


03/05/24
03/05/24

UK decoiler Atlantic Steel enters administration

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