Precious Metals - 20 Dec 2021
*prices before market open Dec. 20, 2021 |
Base Metals - 20 Dec 2021Copper US $9,511/t |
43-101 Geography
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In a recent staff research paper, Energy Transition Metals, published by the International Monetary Fund (IMF), the potential metal demand from a net zero carbon scenario could generate US$13 trillion in metal production over the next two decades from copper, nickel, lithium, and cobalt production. A typical electric vehicle battery pack uses 8 kilograms (kg) of lithium, 35kg of nickel, 20kg of manganese and 14kg of cobalt, while charging stations require large amounts of copper. Renewable energy such as solar panels use large quantities of copper, silicon, silver and zinc, while wind turbines require iron ore, copper, aluminum, and rare earth elements. A clean energy transition could require as much as 3 billion tons of these materials. According to the IMF paper, this demand would push metal prices to historical peaks for an "unprecedented, sustained period" in a net-zero emissions scenario. The total value of metals production would rise more than four times from 2021 to 2040, surpassing the total value of crude oil production. |
Annual copper revenues would more than double from around US$150 billion in 2020 to more than US$350 billion in 2030. Cobalt and lithium markets are currently comparatively small with respective annual revenues of US$4.9 billion and US$2.3 billion. This is just the beginning for cobalt and lithium. Annual revenues from cobalt could reach US$129 billion in 2030. Annual lithium revenues would consistently increase to US$117 billion in 2040. |
This is a rosy picture for the mining industry, but the source of these metals will pose a challenge as it takes time for new supply and production to come online which could threaten the pace of the energy transition. |
Current production of graphite, cobalt, vanadium, and nickel appear insufficient, with more than a two-thirds gap versus the demand. Present copper, lithium and platinum supplies do not meet future needs, with a 30% to 40% gap versus demand. Where are all the metals going to come from? |