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EV battery industry doubles use of cobalt, nickel

  • : Metals
  • 19/03/20

Producers of electric vehicle (EV) batteries doubled their use of cobalt and nickel last year as auto manufacturing demand increased, according to South Korea's INI Research and Consulting.

The battery industry's cobalt demand last year rose by 102pc from 2017 to 16,629t, while nickel use climbed by 101pc to 41,521t. Lithium use for EV batteries increased by 76pc to 10,902t, while manganese demand rose by 36pc to 17,673t, as a shift toward more high-capacity models pushed consumption toward cobalt and nickel that yield higher energy density.

Shipments of EVs with lithium secondary batteries last year rose by 71pc by capacity to 95.7GWh, INI said. China remained the global leader in EV demand, accounting for 58pc of car shipments. China also had a 126pc rise in cobalt use to 9,092t and a 123pc gain in nickel consumption to 17,605t. Chinese lithium demand climbed by 78pc to 6,461t.

South Korean battery producers were cut out of the Chinese EV boom because cars equipped with their products were excluded from qualifying for generous government subsidies on vehicle purchases. This market barrier saw South Korean demand for EV battery materials rise just by 46pc last year in each segment, pushing lithium use to 1,538t, nickel demand to 6,150t and cobalt to 3,194t.

But China's EV subsidies are scheduled to end next year, with South Korean battery producers to capitalise with production expansions. Much of the growth will not show in statistics as South Korean demand because most of the new production lines will be in China, Europe and the US. South Korea's SK Innovation started work this week on a $1bn plant in the US state of Georgia that is scheduled to be completed in 2021, aiming to boost the company's production capacity to 60GWh by 2022 from 4.7GWh currently.

Japanese cobalt demand rose by 116pc in 2018 to 4,330t, while the country's nickel use rose by 108pc to 17,739t, INI said. Japan had the largest gain in lithium use, up by 93pc to 2,891t. But its manganese demand dropped by 29pc to 2,134t.

EV battery producers have formed partnerships with materials producers to help stabilise their supply lines, INI said. But the industry needs to minimise use of cobalt and develop next generation products that use less of the element because of its high and volatile cost, it added.


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25/06/18

US Fed sees 2 rate cuts in '25, eyes tariffs: Update

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Adds Powell comments, economic backdrop. Houston, 18 June (Argus) — US Federal Reserve policymakers kept the target interest rate unchanged today and signaled two quarter-point cuts are still likely this year while downgrading forecasts for the US economy in the face of largely tariff-driven uncertainty. The Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held the federal funds rate unchanged at 4.25-4.50pc, in the fourth meeting of 2025. This followed rate cuts of 100 basis points over the last three meetings of 2024, which lowered the target rate from more than two-decade highs. In the Fed's first release of updated economic projections since President Donald Trump's 2 April "Liberation Day" announcement of far-ranging tariffs, policymakers continued to pencil in two quarter-point rate cuts for the remainder of the year. "Changes to trade, immigration, fiscal and regulatory policies continue to evolve and their effects on the economy remain uncertain," Fed chair Jerome Powell told reporters after the meeting. "Today, the amount of the tariff effects — the size of the tariff effects, their duration and the time it will take, are all highly uncertain. So that is why we think the appropriate thing to do is to hold where we are as we learn more." Policymakers and Fed officials Wednesday lowered their median estimate for GDP growth this year to 1.4pc from a prior estimate of 1.7pc in the March economic outlook. They see inflation rising to a median 3pc for 2025 from the prior estimate of 2.7pc, with unemployment rising to 4.5pc from 4.4pc in the prior forecast. Economists have warned that Trump's erratic use of tariffs and plans to raise the national debt, along with mounting geopolitical risk highlighted by the latest Israel-Iran clashes, threaten to throw the economy into a recession or marked slowdown. Consumer confidence has tumbled and financial markets have been volatile while the dollar has slumped to three-year lows. Still, the labor market and inflation — the two pillars of the Fed's policy mandate — have remained relatively stable into the fifth month of Trump's administration. "As long as the economy is solid, as long as we're seeing the kind of labor market that we have and reasonably decent growth, and inflation moving down, we feel like the right thing to do is to be where we are, where our policy stance is and learn more," Powell said. US job growth slowed to 139,000 in May, near the average gain of 149,000 over the prior 12 months and unemployment has remained in a range of 4-4.2pc since May 2024. Consumer inflation was at an annual 2.4pc in May, down from 3pc in January. US GDP growth contracted by an annual 0.2pc in the first quarter, largely due to an increase in imports on pre-tariff stockpiling, down from 2.4pc in the fourth quarter and the lowest in three years. "What we're waiting for to reduce rates is to understand what will happen with the tariff inflation," Powell said. "And there's a lot of uncertainty about that. Every forecaster you can name who is a professional is forecasting a meaningful increase in inflation in coming months from tariffs because someone has to pay for the tariffs." Before Wednesday's FOMC announcement, Trump made a rambling attack on the Fed's policy under Powell, in remarks to reporters at the White House. "I call him 'too late Powell', because he's always too late" in lowering rates. "Am I allowed to appoint myself at the Fed? I do a much better job than these people." Powell's term in office as Fed chair expires in May 2026. Powell declined to directly address Trump's comments. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Tarifas podem incentivar interesse dos EUA na AL


25/06/18
25/06/18

Tarifas podem incentivar interesse dos EUA na AL

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US Fed keeps rate flat, still eyes 2 cuts in 2025


25/06/18
25/06/18

US Fed keeps rate flat, still eyes 2 cuts in 2025

Houston, 18 June (Argus) — US Federal Reserve policymakers kept the target interest rate unchanged today and signaled two quarter-point cuts are still likely this year. The Fed's Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) held the federal funds rate unchanged at 4.25-4.50pc, in the fourth meeting of 2025. This followed rate cuts of 100 basis points over the last three meetings of 2024, which lowered the target rate from more than two-decade highs. In the Fed's first release of updated economic projections since President Donald Trump's 2 April "Liberation Day" announcement of far-ranging tariffs, policymakers continued to pencil in two quarter-point rate cuts for the remainder of the year. Policymakers and Fed officials Wednesday lowered their estimate for GDP growth this year to 1.4pc from a prior estimate of 1.7pc in the March economic outlook. They see inflation rising to 3pc for 2025 from the prior estimate of 2.7pc, with unemployment rising to 4.5pc from 4.4pc in the prior forecast. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Eurofer calls for 50pc quota tariff post safeguard


25/06/18
25/06/18

Eurofer calls for 50pc quota tariff post safeguard

New York, 18 June (Argus) — European steel association Eurofer has asked the European Commission to implement an out-of-quota tariff of 50pc in its post safeguard measure, while reducing duty-free volumes by 50pc, Italian steelmaker Arvedi chief executive Mario Arvedi Caldonazzo told the Global Steel Dynamics Forum in New York late yesterday. "We need to adopt a strict and severe trade defence measure," Caldonazzo said, adding that discussions with the commission were ongoing, and that it would publish a proposal on the measures that would replace the safeguard in mid-July. Eurofer, of which Caldonazzo is vice-president, wants these measures to come into play in January 2026, earlier than the planned lapse of the current safeguard mechanism in June 2026. Imports have reached as much as 30pc of total supply on some products, at much lower prices than domestic production. "The commission is aware this is the move that will determine the future of the European industry," he said. Eurofer hopes the commission will make its proposal regarding a melt-and-pour clause in September-October, and that scrap will be recognised as a critical raw material. Caldonazzo said the EU exports 20mn t of scrap that is transformed into steel products then sold back to Europe, and that more material being retained could help mills increase scrap usage and reduce their carbon footprint. The EU's carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) also needs to be extended downstream to address the risk of circumvention, and also that "resource shuffling" is addressed. This is where mills use a portion of greener production to sell into the EU at a lower payable tax, while retaining more carbon intensive sales into other markets. "Without these measures the future will be very sad," Caldonazzo said, adding that the EU could just end up importing and re-rolling semi-finished steel. Lourenco Goncalves, the outspoken head of Cleveland-Cliffs, said in another presentation that the EU would eliminate its carbon emissions by ceasing to produce steel. Talks over the Global Arrangement on Sustainable Steel and Aluminum (GASA) should be restarted, building a free trade agreement between the US and EU, allowing both to expand trade on a duty and quota free basis, Caldonazzo said. This would be possible should the EU have similar trade defence measures to the US, such as a melt and pour. On the sidelines of the conference he told Argus there will be no recovery in the EU market this year, given the disparity between imports and domestic prices, and the very low level of demand. By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia's Lynas produces terbium oxide in Malaysia


25/06/18
25/06/18

Australia's Lynas produces terbium oxide in Malaysia

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