Author Archives: Nanthakumar Victor Emmanuel, P.Eng

Indonesian Battery Corporation to build EV battery recycling plant by 2031, supporting nickel sustainability

Indonesia Battery Corporation (IBC) is targeting to establish an electric vehicle (EV) battery recycling plant by 2031 in support of nickel sustainability and green energy campaigns.

IBC President Director, Toto Nugroho, said there is an interesting technology that can recycle nickel batteries used in electric vehicles, which involves recycling method covering more than 99 percent of battery components.

“The nickel that we have used as batteries for cars can be recycled, so we can reuse the nickel,”Toto said on Tuesday, February 18, 2025.

He revealed that the recycling plant will be one of the electric battery industry ecosystems in Indonesia, citing that this effort is to support the sustainability of the nickel industry in Indonesia through recycling so that it can close down the previous fear that battery nickel has no solution for recycling.

Read more at: https://indonesiabusinesspost.com/3595/soes-corporates/ibc-to-build-ev-battery-recycling-plant-by-2031-supporting-nickel-sustainability

I am proud to be a United ProCanadian – Happy Family Day

United ProCanada

United Provinces of Canada

United Provinces of Canada which includes the Territories

We are united.

Happy family day

#US #DODs’ AI-Powered Market Forecasting: A Game Changer for Critical Minerals?

The Department of Defense’s %AI program aims to provide predictive insights into pricing and availability, which could help mining companies, manufacturers, and policymakers make more informed decisions. By analyzing historical data, global supply trends, and real-time market conditions, AI can offer more accurate forecasts, potentially reducing the price volatility that often plagues the sector.

Read more at: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/markets/stocks/FCX-N/pressreleases/30926678/ai-powered-market-forecasting-a-game-changer-for-critical-minerals/

President #Trump Urges Trading #Ukraine’s #RareEarth Minerals for More #US Aid

President Trump said Monday he wants to strike a deal with Ukraine whereby Kyiv would supply the United States with rare earth minerals in exchange for American aid, offering the clearest sign yet of his transactional approach to supporting the war-torn nation.

“We’re looking to do a deal with Ukraine, where they’re going to secure what we’re giving them with their rare earths and other things,” Mr. Trump said from the Oval Office, where he was signing executive orders. “We want a guarantee.”

Read more at: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/02/03/world/europe/trump-ukraine-rare-earth-minerals.html

#India approves US$1.9bn scheme for #CriticalMinerals

India’s Cabinet on Wednesday approved a 163 billion-rupee (US$1.9 billion) program to secure supplies of a range of minerals used mainly in battery, electronics, defense and agriculture sectors.

The National Critical Mineral Mission will focus on local mining and processing of 24 vital minerals, as well as acquisitions of mining blocks overseas, Information and Broadcasting Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw told reporters.

The initiative, which will also give a thrust to the recycling of materials such as lithium, cobalt, potash and graphite, will help reduce the country’s reliance on imports, he said in New Delhi. The nation relies almost entirely on overseas shipments for energy transition materials, including cobalt, nickel, lithium and copper ore and concentrates, with China being a key supplier.

Read more at: https://www.taipeitimes.com/News/biz/archives/2025/01/31/2003831089

Impact of #US Tariffs on #Canadian #Nickel Industry

Tariffs will disrupt the long-standing flow of nickel between Canada and the US

Canada is the single largest supplier of nickel metal to the US market, typically delivering between 35–40% of the United States’ annual primary nickel requirements over the past decade according to trade statistics and CRU’s Nickel Service. However, US President-Elect Donald Trump has announced potential 25% tariffs on Canadian imports, threatening to disrupt the flow of nickel across the border.

This will not only have a negative impact on the Canadian nickel industry, which is already struggling with high costs amid a global market in chronic surplus, but also on the US industry that needs a stable and secure source of high-purity nickel in a world that is increasingly dominated by China.

US market has no domestic nickel industry and is fully reliant on imports

In the US, nickel is largely used to make stainless steel followed by uses in foundry, alloying and plating applications – very little nickel is used domestically in battery applications. When it comes to stainless steel, the US has a mature scrap collection and distribution network meeting more than 80% of stainless-steel nickel requirement. The remainder needs to be secured by purchasing ferronickel or high-purity nickel. For all other applications, high-purity nickel is required.

The US has one operating nickel mine located in Michigan, owned by Lundin. This mine produces a concentrate that is exported, given the US has no domestic nickel smelters or refineries with the capability to process nickel-bearing concentrates. However, this mine is anticipated to exhaust its production by the end of 2025, leaving the US with no domestic nickel industry. As a result, the US will be completely reliant on imports to meet its primary nickel requirements.

Depending on the permanence of tariffs, US domestic nickel refining may become an attractive proposition and there is at least one company with plans to build a carbonyl nickel refinery producing high-purity nickel. However, the challenge this plant will have is sourcing intermediate feed.

Tariffs will push Canadian nickel to other markets

Although Canada is home to several large nickel producers, only one has the right surface assets and ore sources to be able to supply the US market from Canada. Vale produces high-purity nickel from its Sudbury and Long Harbor operations. However, its Canadian assets sit in the third and fourth quartile of CRU’s Net Cash Cost Excl. Royalties Industry Costs Curve.



Despite being positioned near the top of the cost curve, Vale’s operations appear to be able to turn a profit at YTD prices. However, when simulating for the impact of tariffs, Vale’s operations come under tremendous pressure.



Read more at: https://www.crugroup.com/en/communities/thought-leadership/2024/impact-of-us-tariffs-on-canadian-nickel-industry/

$US Mulls Backing $Brazilian $Nickel Plant With Up to $550 Million

The US government is considering whether to provide a loan of up to $550 million to help developing a nickel and cobalt mine in Brazil’s Northeast.

Brazilian Nickel Ltd. has received a letter from the US International Development Finance Corporation expressing its interest in backing the Piauí Nickel Project. The company expects to convert the letter of interest into a committed financing facility in early 2025. The amount represents almost 40% of the project’s overall financing package, it said in a statement.

Read more at: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2024-12-09/us-mulls-backing-brazilian-nickel-plant-with-up-to-550-million?utm_source=google&utm_medium=bd&cmpId=google

#China Bans Rare Mineral Exports to the #US

China said on Tuesday it would begin banning the export of some rare minerals to the United States, in an escalation of the tech war between the world’s two biggest powers. The move comes a day after the Biden administration tightened Chinese access to advanced American technology.

Sales of gallium, germanium, antimony and other materials to the United States would be halted immediately on national security grounds, China’s Ministry of Commerce said, citing the minerals’ use for military purposes. The export of graphite would also be subject to stricter review.

Read more at: https://www.nytimes.com/2024/12/03/world/asia/china-minerals-semiconductors.html

#GKN #Hoeganaes to support First Phosphate in #LFP cathode active material development

GKN Hoeganaes, a division of GKN Powder Metallurgy and one of the largest iron powder producers globally, today announces a strategic collaboration with First Phosphate. This partnership marks a significant step toward establishing a North American supply chain for lithium iron phosphate (LFP) batteries, a critical component for the electric vehicle (EV) and energy storage industries.

Read more at:https://www.gknpm.com/en/news-and-media/news-releases/2024/gkn-hoeganaes-to-support-first-phosphate-in-lfp-cathode-active-material-development/

Could rare earth recycling in #USA relieve #China of a trade #Trump card?

China’s abundant supply of rare earth minerals, essential in the production of many technologies – and long considered an ace in the hole for deterring or responding to an escalated trade war – could become less of a strategic advantage if the US and its allies ease their demand by harvesting and recycling the materials from obsolete equipment.

Recycling can be ramped up faster than new mines, which could take decades to become commercially viable, said Hu Xinyue, a senior analyst in the China programme at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies at Singapore’s S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

“From an environmentally friendly perspective, recycling reduces the need for new rare earth mining, thereby decreasing both the environmental and energy footprints associated with extraction and processing,” she said in a research paper released on Thursday.

Read more at: https://www.scmp.com/economy/china-economy/article/3286757/could-rare-earth-recycling-relieve-china-trade-trump-card

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