Glencore talks nickel with car, battery makers

The Raglan nickel mine. Credit: Glencore.

Global miner and commodities trader Glencore (LSE: GLEN) is close to securing nickel supply deals with automakers and battery producers amid a looming squeeze in the market and Tesla CEO Elon Musk’s recent call to miners to produce more of the metal.

“A lot of the automobile guys and the battery guys are talking to us about nickel,” CEO Ivan Glasenberg said during the Financial Times Mining Summit.

Earlier this year, the Swiss company scored an agreement with Tesla to supply it with the cobalt needed for two new car plants.

Glencore is already the main cobalt provider for German carmaker BMW. The metal, a key component in the cathodes of EV batteries, is sent from the miner’s Murrin Murrin nickel-cobalt operation in Australia. The company also owns nickel mines in Canada and New Caledonia and a refinery in Norway.

Last year, the company churned out 121,000 tonnes nickel and sold 181,000 tonnes through its marketing business.

Nickel can help pack more energy into batteries and allows producers to reduce the use of cobalt, which is more expensive and typically has a less transparent supply chain.

Demand for nickel is forecast to surge in the coming years as companies from Tesla to Volkswagen add to their lineups of electric models. In July, Musk promised a “giant” contract to miners that produce the metal in an “environmentally sensitive way.”

Musk said last month that his firm had been in contact with several nickel producers, without identifying the companies. Mining giant BHP (NYSE: BHP; LSE: BHP) and Brazil’s Vale (NYSE: VALE) are said to be among them.

Tesla’s battery production capacity is expected to increase 570% over the next decade to 248 gigawatt hours, according to consultancy Benchmark Mineral Intelligence. One GWh of battery capacity is enough for about 18,000 EVs on average.

Analysts and industry players expect the market for battery-grade nickel to be in a tight balance in the next two to three years as demand from lithium-ion battery producers picks up.

“Nickel demand will grow significantly off the back of batteries and the EV thematic, and that will pull nickel prices up,” BHP CEO Mike Henry said in an interview earlier this year.

Nickel dropped to a 14-month low of US$10,865 per tonne CMNI3 in March, and has recovered to US$15,353 per tonne.

That’s still 10% less than the prices reached in September 2019, when nickel traded at five-year peaks.

— This article, with files from Reuters and Bloomberg, first appeared in MINING.com, part of the Glacier Resource Innovation Group.

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