Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Russian nickel, palladium, chromium exports a headache for Germany

Russian gas and oil are by far the most significan­t exports Moscow sells to Germany. Yet other important raw materials are also under the spotlight because of the war in Ukraine.

- Edited by: Hardy Graupner

Almost all the debate surroundin­g Germany's economic ties with Russia since the invasion of Ukraine has focused on gas and oil. With good reason — Germany buys more Russian oil and gas than any other European country, making energy Russia's most lucrative import to Germany by far.

However, many German companies rely on a steady supply of other Russian exports, particular­ly raw materials such as nickel, palladium, copper and chromium.

Nickel is used in stainless steelmakin­g but is also an important component for lithium-ion batteries which are needed to power electric cars. Palladium is also vital for carmakers, as it is a critical component in the production of catalytic converters, which clean exhaust fumes in petrol and hybrid vehicles.

In 2020, Russia was Germany's biggest provider of raw nickel, accounting for 39% of the country's supply according to the MIT Observator­y of Economic Complexity, a trade tracker.

It also provided around 25% of German imports of palladium, and between 15% and 20% of the heavy metals chromium and cadmium, which have a range of industrial uses. Russia also accounted for 11% of Germany's refined copper imports in 2020, 10.9% of its platinum and 8.5% of its iron ore.

Nickel and Daimler

A recent study by the German Economic Institute (IW), a Cologne-based think-tank, identified several raw materials imported from Russia which would be difficult to replace for Germany. "New trade relations with alternativ­e export nations for these raw materials are essential," the institute said in a statement.

Nickel is particular­ly important to consider. Germany's second-biggest import partner for raw nickel in 2020 was the Netherland­s at 29%. But Russia is the market leader, supplying around 20% of the world's purest form of the metal, known as class 1 nickel.

High grade nickel has been in increasing­ly short supply for a few years now. The boom in electric vehicle production around the world — which needs highgrade nickel for batteries — has seen demand surge.

Tesla CEO Elon Musk has frequently tweeted about the lack of nickel. "Nickel is the biggest challenge for high-volume, longrange batteries!" he wrote in July 2020. "Australia & Canada are doing pretty well. US nickel production is objectivel­y very lame. Indonesia is great!"

Class 1 nickel prices had already doubled over the last two years but Russia's invasion of Ukraine prompted fears that Moscow could impose an export ban. A trading frenzy in early March saw prices hit record highs, with the London Metal Exchange even suspending trading for a period, the first time it had taken such action in 37 years. Nickel prices have gone up 400% in 2022 alone.

Volkswagen — which has effectivel­y staked its future on rapidly becoming an EV power — recently announced that it had struck an agreement with the Chinese companies Huayou Cobalt and Tsingshan Group for a joint venture to secure raw cobalt and nickel supply in Indonesia, one of the world's biggest producers.

Export bans, import bans

However, uncertaint­y over Russian raw materials will continue to stalk the market. Some analysts have predicted that the nickel crisis alone will add at least $1,000 (€919) to the costs of a new electric car for consumers.

The VDA, the trade body for German carmakers, says the war in Ukraine will lead to further disruption of vehicle production in Germany. "In the long term, the car industry is facing shortages and higher prices of raw materials," it said in a statement.

Not only carmakers are affected. In 2018, German chemicals giant BASF joined forces with Russia's Norilsk Nickel, the world's largest producer of refined nickel, for a deal which would see the Russian company supply BASF's new battery materials production facility in Finland with nickel and cobalt. Such deals are now being heavily scrutinize­d.

Although Moscow did not put materials such as nickel on the export ban list it released in March, there remains a chance that sanctions either from Moscow or Brussels will end the flow of such raw materials to Europe.

On Friday, the EU announced import bans on several Russian products including coal, caviar, wood, rubber, cement and vodka. However, nickel and other commoditie­s exported in high volume to countries such as Germany were left off the list.

Small potatoes compared to energy

Even if the sale of Russian nickel to Europe is not legally prohibited, the overwhelmi­ng pressure on German companies to cut business ties with Russia continues to mount in practicall­y every sector.

Yet while myriad economic and business links between Germany and Russia die away and will continue to do so in the face of the outrage over what is happening in Ukraine, almost every scenario is dwarfed in significan­ce by the possible consequenc­es of an embargo on Russian oil and gas.

Many experts and business leaders have argued that Germany's economic prosperity of recent decades has largely been built on the cheap supply of Russian energy.

BASF head Martin Brudermüll­er told the Frankfurte­r Allgemeine Zeitung that a sudden ban on Russian oil or gas could lead to an economic crisis as bad as any in Germany since World War II, and that his company would have to stop production if natural gas supplies fell to less than half the current usage.

Some disagree with such strong assessment­s. A study by the German National Academy of Sciences, Leopoldina, said ending supply immediatel­y would be "manageable."

The fact that something as stringent as an outright ban on Russian energy is being seriously debated does make one thing clear for any German business with ties to Russia, regardless of their nature: Nothing is off limits, regardless of how economical­ly "critical" it may be.

 ?? ?? Nickel is important for making lithiumion batteries for electric cars
Nickel is important for making lithiumion batteries for electric cars
 ?? ?? Russian nickel is important to the German economy
Russian nickel is important to the German economy

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