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西方礦商尋求稀土金屬溢價以打破中國的控製

(2023-11-22 12:27:19) 下一個

西方礦商尋求稀土金屬溢價以打破中國的控製

https://www.euractiv.com/section/circular-economy/news/western-miners-seek-premium-pricing-for-rare-earth-metals-to-break-china-grip/
Euractiv.com 與路透社 2023 年 11 月 9 日

加拿大、德國和澳大利亞的少數關鍵礦產勘探商計劃對電動汽車中使用的關鍵金屬收取高價,承諾質量和一致性,以換取擺脫對主要生產國和價格製定者中國的依賴。

中國控製著稀土金屬 95% 的生產和供應,而稀土金屬是製造電動汽車 (EV) 和風電場磁體不可或缺的一部分,這種壟斷使中國能夠決定價格,並通過出口管製在最終用戶中引發混亂。

公司官員告訴路透社,目前,在多倫多證券交易所上市的 Aclara Resources 和澳大利亞 Ionic Rare Earths 等礦業公司正在討論可能放鬆中國對關鍵礦產市場控製的計劃,轉向由市場決定價格。

知情人士稱,加拿大礦業公司 Neo Performance Materials 和德國 Vacuumschmelze 也在討論類似的計劃。 當路透社聯係到這兩家公司時,他們沒有發表評論。

“(中國)對戰略礦產的控製持續升級,如果稀土成為下一個,也就不足為奇了,”正在智利開發重稀土項目的阿克拉拉資源公司首席執行官拉蒙·巴魯阿表示。

Aclara 正在尋求開采鏑等重稀土金屬,並正在與原始設備製造商 (OEM) 就溢價進行談判,作為長期承購協議的一部分。

此前未報道的計劃出台之際,礦商正尋求從七國集團 (G7) 國家激勵礦商和汽車製造商在國內或從友好國家生產和采購關鍵金屬的舉措中受益。

作為交換,這些礦工希望最終用戶支付溢價。 他們認為,西方和中國之間的地緣政治緊張局勢危及稀土礦物的可靠供應。 如果中國堅持出口限製,就像對鍺和石墨等大宗商品那樣,供應可能會進一步受到影響。

新歐盟聯盟旨在實現關鍵原材料的“戰略自主”

歐盟委員會周二(9月30日)成立了一個新的行業聯盟,旨在加強歐盟在稀土等原材料方麵的“戰略自主權”,稀土被認為是歐盟綠色和數字化轉型的關鍵。

稀土是由 17 種元素組成的一組元素,因其磁性和電子特性而被用於電動汽車、風力渦輪機和消費電子產品等各種產品中,在北京上個月宣布從 12 月起對某些石墨產品實施出口許可證要求以保護國家安全後,稀土再次受到關注。 ,以國家安全為由。

例如,用於製造世界上最強大磁鐵的釹目前的價格在每公斤 73 美元至 520 美元之間,公司表示,中國以外的價格可能比當前報價高出 30%。

阿克拉拉的巴魯亞表示,如果依賴中國的價格,西方稀土元素的供應就不會發展。

“西方將能夠供應對環境負責且可追溯的稀土,但成本結構與中國不同,因此價格昂貴,”他說。

個人退休賬戶杠杆

礦商們認為,由於新的環境、社會和治理相關立法以及美國通脹削減法案等稅收激勵措施,製造商將承擔額外成本,並認為可靠和可持續采購的稀土價格溢價是有道理的,這是向稀土過渡的關鍵。 更清潔的能源。

對於任何 OEM 來說,差別定價的困境在於能否判斷支付更高價格所帶來的可量化價值。

“我們作為原始設備製造商想要的是一個全球公平的競爭環境,這意味著擁有透明、可持續和可靠的定價,”格蘭富首席專家 Badrinath Veluri 說道。格蘭富是一家總部位於丹麥的原始設備製造商,生產使用稀土磁體的水泵。

韋魯裏補充說,如果任何供應商聲稱他們通過收取更高的價格來帶來價值,他希望了解這種說法的具體優點。

“來自中國或西方國家的任何金屬(稀土或其他)的價格都是相同的,那麽為什麽稀土的定價應該不同呢?” 維魯裏問道。

Veluri 表示,關於定價的討論在稀土行業協會中經常出現。他也是該全球組織的主席,其合作夥伴代表了整個稀土價值鏈。

總部位於美國的 MP Materials 和澳大利亞萊納斯是中國以外全球最大的兩家稀土公司,記者未能立即聯係到其置評。

歐盟旨在通過《原材料法》減少對中國的依賴

歐盟委員會主席烏蘇拉·馮德萊恩宣布了一項新的立法提案,即《關鍵原材料法案》,以解決原材料方麵對中國不斷變化的依賴問題,並確保供應鏈更具彈性。

開發稀土開采項目可能需要數十年的時間,投資者的風險厭惡情緒已經破壞了中國境外一些項目的可行性。 雖然越南、馬來西亞和緬甸提供了中國的替代品,但它們的最終產量仍然遙遠。

公司提出了定價替代方案,例如按生產成本加資本成本出售稀土精礦,以確保礦山保持盈利。 另一種選擇是限製中國稀土製造商提供的價格,保護原始設備製造商免受價格劇烈波動的影響。

另一種選擇是考慮中國稀土製造商提供的價格並設定上限,因此即使稀土價格上漲100%,原始設備製造商最終也不會為這些波動買單。

這些機製可能會使電機中使用稀土磁鐵的電動汽車的成本增加至少 30-50%。

“一切最終都與權衡有關,”離子稀土公司董事總經理蒂姆·哈裏森說。 哈裏森補充道:“如果你想要一款與可持續性指標、最大限度減少碳足跡等相關的產品,那麽顯然這是有成本的,並且需要反映在供應鏈準備支付的價格中。”

“原始設備製造商可能不會為大量購買的產品支付更高的價格,例如鋰,”汽車零部件製造商協會主席弗拉維奧·沃爾普說,該協會是代表加拿大零部件和設備原始設備製造商生產商的遊說團體。

沃爾普補充道:“但對於鈷、銅或稀土金屬等,可以與采礦合作夥伴找到一個很好的戰略策略。”

關鍵原材料:專家稱中國領先15年

一位專家表示,中國在綠色轉型方麵的戰略準備要充分得多,並且在為淨零排放行業提供動力的關鍵原材料的開采和加工方麵具有至少 15 年的優勢。

Western miners seek premium pricing for rare earth metals to break China grip

https://www.euractiv.com/section/circular-economy/news/western-miners-seek-premium-pricing-for-rare-earth-metals-to-break-china-grip/

Euractiv.com with Reuters  Nov 9, 2023

A handful of Canadian, German and Australian critical mineral explorers plan to command premium prices for key metals used in electric vehicles, promising quality and consistency in exchange for shifting reliance away from China, the dominant producer and price-setter.

China controls 95% of the production and supply of rare earth metals, integral to manufacturing magnets for electric vehicles (EVs) and wind farms, and this monopoly has allowed China to dictate prices and stir turmoil among end users through export controls.

Now, mining companies such as TSX-listed Aclara Resources and Australia’s Ionic Rare Earths are discussing plans that may loosen China’s grip on the critical minerals market, moving towards market-determined prices, company officials told Reuters.

Canadian miner Neo Performance Materials and Germany’s Vacuumschmelze are also discussing similar plans, people familiar with the matter said. The two companies did not offer comment when reached by Reuters.

“The controls on strategic minerals (by China) continues to escalate, it comes as no surprise if rare earths are next,” said Ramon Barua, CEO of Aclara Resources, which is developing a heavy rare earth project in Chile.

Aclara is looking to mine heavy rare earth metal, such as dysprosium, and is in talks with original equipment manufacturers (OEMs) for a premium pricing as part of a long-term offtake deal.

The previously unreported plans come as the miners seek to benefit from the Group of Seven (G7) countries’ move to incentivise miners and automakers to produce and procure critical metals domestically or from friendly nations.

In exchange, these miners expect end users to pay a premium. They argue that geopolitical tensions between the West and China risk the reliable supply of rare earth minerals. If China persists with export restrictions, as it has with commodities like germanium and graphite, supply could be further compromised.

New EU alliance aims for 'strategic autonomy' on key raw materials

The European Commission launched a new industry alliance on Tuesday (30 September) aimed at strengthening the EU’s “strategic autonomy” on raw materials like rare earths, which are considered key for the bloc’s green and digital transitions.

Rare earths, a group of 17 elements used in various products including EVs, wind turbines, and consumer electronics due to their magnetic and electronic properties, garnered renewed attention after Beijing last month announced export permit requirements for some graphite products from December to protect national security, citing national security concerns.

For instance, the current price of neodymium, used to make the most powerful magnet in the world, varies between $73 to $520 per kg and companies say ex-China prices could be 30% more than the current quoted price.

Aclara’s Barua said that Western supply of rare earth elements will not develop if it depends on Chinese prices.

“The West will be able to supply environmentally responsible and traceable rare earths, but the cost structure is different to the Chinese and hence it comes at a premium,” he said.

IRA leverage

The miners believe manufacturers will absorb extra costs due to new environmental, social and governance-related legislation and tax incentives like the US Inflation Reduction Act and argue that a premium price is warranted for reliable and sustainably sourced rare earths that are key to the transition to cleaner energy.

For any OEM, the quandary of differential pricing is about being able to judge a quantifiable value that paying higher price brings.

“What we as OEMs want is a global level playing field, and that means having a transparent, sustainable and reliable pricing,” Badrinath Veluri, chief specialist at Grundfos, an OEM based out of Denmark that manufactures water pumps that use rare earth magnets.

Veluri added that if any supplier is claiming that they bring value by charging higher prices, he wants to see the specific merits of that claim.

“The price of any metal (rare earth or otherwise) that is coming from China or from western countries has the same pricing, so why should rare earth pricing be different?” Veluri asked.

The discussion on pricing has come up often in the Rare Earth Industry Association, said Veluri, who is also the president of the global organisation with partners representing the whole rare earth value chain.

US-based MP Materials and Australia’s Lynas, the world’s two biggest rare earths companies outside of China, were not immediately available for comment.

EU aims to lessen dependency on China with Raw Materials Act

Commission President Ursula von der Leyen announced a new legislative proposal, the Critical Raw Material Act, to tackle the evolving dependency on China when it comes to raw materials and ensure more resilient supply chains.

Developing rare earth mining projects can take decades, and investor risk aversion has derailed the viability of some projects outside of China. While Vietnam, Malaysia, and Myanmar offer alternatives to China, their final production remains distant.

Companies have suggested pricing alternatives such as selling rare earth concentrates at their cost of production plus capital cost, ensuring mines remain profitable. Another option is to cap prices at those offered by Chinese rare earth makers, protecting OEMs from drastic price fluctuations.

The other option is taking into account the price offered by Chinese rare earth makers and putting a ceiling to it, so even if there is a 100% jump in rare earth prices, OEMs do not end up paying for those fluctuation.

These mechanisms could boost the cost of an EV, which uses rare earth magnets in its motor, by at least 30-50%.

“Everything ultimately is about trade off,” said Tim Harrison, managing director of Ionic Rare Earths. “If you want a product tied to sustainability metrics, minimising carbon footprints etc, then obviously that is being delivered with cost and that needs to be reflected in the price that supply chain is prepared to pay,” Harrison added.

“The OEMs probably won’t pay a higher price for stuff that they buy in high volumes, such as lithium,” said Flavio Volpe, president of Automotive Parts Manufacturers Association, the lobby group that represents Canada’s OEM producers of parts and equipment.

“But for things like cobalt, copper, or rare earth metals there is a good strategic play to find with a mining partner,” Volpe added.

Critical Raw Materials: China 15 years ahead, expert says

China is strategically far better prepared when it comes to the Green transition and has an edge of at least 15 years when it comes to the mining and processing of critical raw materials that will fuel the net-zero industry, according to an expert.

 

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