National Post

Electric-car revolution gives metals a charge

A ‘COMPLETE GAME- CHANGER’ FOR LITHIUM AND COBALT

- MARK BURTON AND EDDIE WALT VAN DER in London Bloomberg

The revolution in electric vehicles set to upturn industries from energy to i nfrastruct­ure is also creating winners and losers within the world’s biggest metals markets.

While some of the largest diversifie­d miners like Glencore

Plc argue fossil fuels such as coal and oil still play a crucial role supplying energy needs, they’ll also benefit the most from a move to electric cars, requiring more cobalt, lithium, copper, aluminum and nickel.

The outlook for greener transporta­tion got a boost this year as the U. K. joined France and Norway in saying it would ban fossilfuel car sales in coming decades. That’s as Volvo AB announced plans to abandon the combustion engine and Tesla Inc. unveiled its cheaper Model 3. Such vehicles will outsell their petroleum- driven equivalent­s within two decades, Bloomberg New Energy Finance estimates.

“For some of the metals, it’s a complete game-changer,” said Simona Gambarini, a commoditie­s economist at Capital Economics Ltd. in London. “We’ve already seen a big impact on some metals like cobalt and lithium, which have soared over the past couple of years.”

COPPER AND COBALT

Electric cars contain about three times more copper than a regular vehicle, according to Glencore. Even more is needed for charging stations, with Exane BNP Paribas seeing such infrastruc­ture adding about five per cent to demand by 2025. Lithium, cobalt, graphite and manganese used in batteries will also see additional demand.

Glencore will get a boost as rising electric- vehicle sales lend support to copper prices, as well as from its position as the world’s largest cobalt producer,

according to Jefferies Group LLC. Freeport-McMoRan Inc. and First Quantum Minerals

Ltd. are also top picks for longterm investors looking to benefit from the trend, the brokerage said in a note Tuesday.

Markets are responding. Cobalt has surged 70 per cent on the London Metal Exchange this year, after jumping 37 per cent in 2016. Lithium prices have extended gains in recent years. Copper is also up 14 per cent in 2017 on signs of resurgent economic growth, particular­ly in China. Glencore shares have risen 20 per cent in London, outpacing rivals including Rio Tinto Group, BHP Billiton Ltd. and Anglo American Plc.

LITHIUM AND LEAD

On the flip side, lead producers such as Recylex SA and

Campine SA may need to adapt operations to the new era. The main end use for lead is in starter batteries for gasoline and diesel engines. Electric vehicles are powered by lithium-ion units.

“It’s a serious risk for lead demand, unless you find different applicatio­ns to make up for the decline,” said Michael Widmer, head of metals market research at Bank of America Merrill Lynch in London.

Yet with lead prices up 17 per cent this year, the best of any major industrial metal traded in London, investors see only distant risks.

“I’m not so sure things will turn out” so badly for lead, as cheap oil prices help keep convention­al cars competitiv­e, said Herwig Schmidt, head of sales at metals brokerage Triland Metals Ltd. If demand for lead does drop, it will do so gradually, he said — “Maybe that will be the case in 10 years or so.”

In the meantime, stricter emissions rules could raise demand for hybrid cars that rely on advanced lead- intensive batteries to cope with frequent engine stops and starts, according to the Internatio­nal Lead and Zinc Study Group.

ALUMINUM AND STEEL

It’s not just shifts in use of batteries and wires that are forcing change. Lightweigh­t metals like aluminum are replacing steel to allow cars to travel further on less power. That already expanded demand by about 1.6 million tonnes, or 2.7 per cent of global output, from 2013 to 2016 in a trend that’s likely to accelerate, Widmer said.

“More so than normal, we’re thinking about how the future will look for some of these metal markets because of this EV evolution,” said Tom Price, a metals analyst at Morgan Stanley in London.

Aluminum is up 13 per cent this year as rising use by automakers has run into supply curbs in China, pushing the market into deficit. Steelmaker­s are fighting back.

AK Steel Holding Corp. has teamed up with General Motors

Co. to try to use nanotechno­logy to make lightweigh­t vehicle bodies. ArcelorMit­tal and Tata

Steel are also among those developing lighter, stronger alloys to fend off the competitio­n.

“The developmen­t of ultrahigh- strength steel is meant to address that,” said Sylvain Brunet, an analyst at Exane BNP Paribas. There’s been “some success in Europe,” Brunet added.

Platinum may also struggle to cope with the end of petroleum.

Almost half the precious metal used last year was sold to the auto industry for use in catalytic converters to curb diesel pollution, according to research from

Johnson Matthey Plc, one of its top refiners.

“A lot of commoditie­s that are in demand right now, like oil and platinum, may not be in demand in the future,” said Bernard Dahdah, a commoditie­s analyst at Natixis SA in London. “It’s not that commoditie­s overall will become less relevant, but we will see a reshufflin­g in terms of what is important in the next 15 years.”

The platinum industry sees a continued need for converters in diesel- hybrid engines. Umicore

SA, a maker of raw materials for batteries and engine catalysts, expects hybrids to still outnumber full- electric cars in 2025, chief executive Marc Grynberg said Monday.

“Given the expected evolution of battery costs, there may still be an advantage to buying a hybrid,” he said.

Fuel- cell vehicles being developed by Toyota Motor Corp. and Hyundai Motor Co. that rely on platinum as a catalyst to generate energy from hydrogen promise the greatest opportunit­y for demand growth in the next 10 years, according to the World Platinum Investment Council lobby.

Yet until such technology has been proven commercial­ly, the industry is at risk from the shift away from fossil fuels.

“Diesel looks set to be the clear loser out of this substituti­on towards electric vehicles,” said Brunet of Exane BNP Paribas.

Perhaps the most immediate danger from electric vehicles, though, is to analysts’ prediction­s.

Given the tectonic shift away from oil and the competing technologi­es to replace the fossil fuel, the outlook for demand from the auto industry has never been so clouded.

“What it comes down to is the extent to which electric vehicles gain popularity,” said Bank of America’s Widmer.

“For metals like copper and nickel, if you underestim­ate electric vehicle sales by one percentage point, you can add one percentage point to global demand.”

 ?? DANIA MAXWELL / BLOOMBERG ?? As sales of electric cars grow, the metals markets are expected to shift from the likes of steel and lead to lithium, copper and aluminum.
DANIA MAXWELL / BLOOMBERG As sales of electric cars grow, the metals markets are expected to shift from the likes of steel and lead to lithium, copper and aluminum.

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