China Daily

GEM expands overseas footprint with Swiss float

- By LIU YUKUN liuyukun@chinadaily.com.cn

Green energy company GEM Co Ltd, one of the first two Shenzhenli­sted companies to issue global depositary receipts on a Swiss bourse, is expanding its overseas footprint to tap growing global demand for new energy and a circular economy.

The company recently announced it has raised $381 million from the GDR offering on the Zurich-based SIX Swiss Exchange, which will be used in the company’s European power battery recycling and new energy material manufactur­ing project, and Indonesia’s nickel resource project.

The move came after China’s top securities regulator launched the China-Switzerlan­d Stock Connect recently, under which Switzerlan­d’s SIX Swiss Exchange, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange and the Shanghai Stock Exchange establishe­d a twoway depository receipt mechanism.

“Currently many companies in the clean energy and new materials sectors have expanded their overseas footprints to either increase sourcing of raw materials or explore new markets. With relatively low production costs, good quality and technology innovation, they have high global competitiv­eness,” said Lin Boqiang, head of the China Institute for Studies in Energy Policy at Xiamen University.

The company announced in May a plan to construct a new energy and circular economy industrial base in Hungary to meet the European Union’s requiremen­ts to localize material manufactur­ing for new energy industries, as well as the EU’s new regulation­s on batteries.

GEM, representi­ng Green, Eco and Manufactur­er, also cooperated with several other new energy companies in 2019 to set up a joint venture, namely PT QMB New Energy Materials in Indonesia, to develop nickel materials. The project is designed to produce 50,000 metric tons of nickel intermedia­tes and 4,000 tons of metal cobalt from nickel laterite mines to meet growing demand for nickel resources buoyed by surging new energy vehicle battery manufactur­ing.

The company said the GDR issuance on the Swiss bourse is important for the company to explore internatio­nal capital markets and expand its green industry to the world.

GEM was one of the first two Shenzhen-listed companies that issued GDRs on the Swiss bourse. The other is battery maker Gotion High-tech Co Ltd.

GEM was listed on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange as China’s first “urban mining” stock. With two decades of developmen­t, the company has expanded its business and covers areas like recycling cellphone batteries, electronic waste, scrapped vehicles, lithium cobalt nickel strategic resources and others.

In the past decade, the company has recycled and disposed of waste of over 32 million tons. Among this, total amount of scrapped home appliances is more than 75 million units, accounting for over 10 percent of the total scrap in China.

It has also recycled over 30,000 tons of cobalt products over the past 10 years, which is more than 200 percent of the amount of cobalt that was mined in China and accounts for 20 percent of total cobalt recycled globally.

GEM also recycled over 60,000 tons of nickel and more than 30,000 tons of tungsten over the same period.

To date, the company has constructe­d 16 recycling industrial parks across 11 provinces and municipali­ties. It also has factories in Indonesia, South Korea and South Africa.

 ?? PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? A GEM facility in Jingmen, Hubei province.
PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY A GEM facility in Jingmen, Hubei province.

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