National Post (National Edition)

Metal used to fight Crusaders surges 67%

Vanadium rises on usefulness in steel, batteries

- THOMAS BIESHEUVEL AND MARK BURTON

It’s turning out to be a great year for minor metals.

Rechargeab­le-battery ingredient cobalt has gained 83 per cent, while ruthenium, used in the chemical industry and electronic­s, is up 63 per cent. The latest star is vanadium, an obscure silvery-grey metal thought to have been used to harden steel as far back as the Crusades.

The metal, which is also used in energy-storage batteries, has surged 67 per cent since mid-July, according to Metal Bulletin data.

Much of vanadium’s rise has been driven by policy changes in Beijing. The China Iron & Steel Research Institute has proposed increasing the amount of vanadium required in constructi­on steel, which would boost consumptio­n, according to VTB Capital and SP Angel research. The new standard is expected in September.

“There are fundamenta­l supply and demand issues that have driven the re-rating,” said Julian Treger, chief executive of

which owns vanadium royalties. “Prices could go higher.”

However, while prices are soaring, there’s no easy way to invest directly in vanadium. The metal isn’t traded on any exchanges and for a company like

which describes itself as one of the largest producers of primary vanadium, the metal represents a small percentage of the group’s total production.

While about 90 per cent of vanadium is used in the steel industry, and high-carbon steel alloys can contain as little as 0.15 per cent of the metal, there are increasing hopes for rising demand for rechargeab­le industrial batteries. Vanadium flow batteries are the size of shipping containers and can be used to store power from renewable sources of energy, smoothing out peaks and troughs and making the power supply more dependable. Pala Investment­s Ltd., an investment firm founded by Russian billionair­e Vladimir Iorich, predicts battery demand for vanadium will grow 10-fold from 2015 to 2025.

There are also questions about supply. The Mapochs mine in South Africa closed last year, while Glencore also said supply has been constraine­d due to environmen­tal inspection­s in China. Russia, China and South Africa are the biggest sources of the metal.

Vanadium was discovered by Mexican chemist Andres Manuel del Rio in 1801, but a letter detailing his find was lost in a shipwreck. Vanadium was then rediscover­ed by Nils Gabriel Sefstrom, a Swedish chemist, in 1830.

The metal is also believed to have been an ingredient in Damascus steel, legendary for its hardness. The swords it produced were famous for their strength and sharpness and credited with helping turn back the Crusades.

Vanadium prices have risen 89 per cent this year, according to Metal Bulletin data.

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