China is set to tighten its grip on the global supply of cobalt as the price of the metal used in electric car batteries hits a 32-month low off the back of a surge in production.
Over the next two years, China’s share of cobalt production is expected to reach half of global output, up from 44 per cent at present, according to a report by Darton Commodities, a UK-based cobalt trader.
China’s growing role in cobalt supply comes as a 12-month rally for the metal has spun into reverse, with prices dropping 60 per cent to $16 a pound from a peak above $40 a pound in May.
«A lot of things converged at the same time to push the market down the relaxation of logistics issues, weak consumer electronic sales and a technology shift towards lower or no cobalt EV batteries,» said Caspar Rawles, chief data officer at Benchmark Mineral Intelligence, a pricing agency.
The supply surge was more than double the demand increase, leading to the price collapse.
Soft sales of portable electronics globally hit demand, Covid-19 lockdowns in China and a shift in the Chinese electric vehicle market towards lower-range batteries that do not use cobalt.
Never a good thing when a powerful country (especially China) has such large control over such a valuable resource.
ReplyDeleteMaybe we should invest in the other countries that are producing cobalt so they (perhaps) produce more?
DeleteWhether it's China or Russia, this is not good. But let's make sure they don't go even higher than 50%. Like Jayden said, we should help the states that produce cobalt so they increase production and do it faster. Countries like: Australia, Canada, Philippines, Congo, Papua New Guinea.
ReplyDeleteFrom what I read, a lot of China's cobalt is coming from Congo. So maybe offer Congo more money so they export to countries like the UK or US? Could that work? Who knows.
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