What happens [when] the Chinese say we are not going to export batteries, we are going to export electric vehicles. Where are the batteries going to come from?
The car industry in the US and Europe risks being left behind by their Chinese rivals unless they secure supplies of cobalt, according to the world's biggest producer of the key battery metal.
Glencore chief executive Ivan Glasenberg told the FT Future of the Car Summit on Wednesday that
western carmakers would be naive to think they could always rely on China to supply the batteries for electric vehicle fleets.
Glasenberg said
Chinese companies had been quick to realise the vulnerability of their supply chains and "tied up" lots of cobalt from the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Chinese companies already control about 40 per cent of the DRC's output and have also signed long-term supply agreements with Glencore, the only major western miner operating in the country.
China has also built a dominant position in cobalt processing and is investing directly in mines.
Earlier this year CATL, the Chinese battery group that has a market value of $130bn, paid $137m for a 25 per stake in China Molybdenum's Kisanfu copper-cobalt mine.
Glasenberg said
Glencore would consider selling a stake in one of its DRC mines to a western carmaker, although it had not received any approaches.
Glencore is expected to produce about 35,000 tonnes of cobalt this year, a figure that could increase by 25,000 to 30,000 if the company decides to develop a new ore body at Mutanda, a mothballed mine in the DRC. "I think that will come on stream in the next 18 months," said Glasenberg.
See the whole article on the FT here:
https://www.ft.com/content/0ee4a6cb-9dbe-4fee-84d0-3f48f3190935?desktop=true&segmentId=d8d3e364-5197-20eb-17cf-2437841d178a#myft:notification:instant-email:content ______________________________