BusinessMirror

PHL viable as minerals processor partner–dti

- By Andrea E. San Juan

THE Philippine­s can be a “vital partner” for the critical minerals such as nickel and copper, among others, not only as an exporter of raw ores but as a processor and producer of semi-finished and finished products, Trade Secretary Alfredo E. Pascual said on Monday.

“Mineral processing is crucial given our resources of green metals such as nickel, copper and cobalt,” Pascual said in his keynote speech at the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippine­s (Finex) Inaugural Meeting and Induction.

The Trade chief said these minerals can be used for “downstream industries” such as electric vehicle (EV) battery manufactur­ing, hyperscale data centers, and renewable energy projects.

As Pascual woos countries to consider the Philippine­s as a processor of these critical minerals, he said the country has Indonesia as a model.

In a separate televised interview on Monday, Glenn G. Peñaranda, Department of Trade and Industry (DTI) Assistant Secretary for Foreign Trade Service Corps, said Glencore, a Swiss multinatio­nal company that is involved in the processing of minerals in the Philippine­s, expressed interest to expand mining and processing operations in the Philippine­s.

Peñaranda echoed Pascual’s call to invite companies to process the Philippine­s’s minerals so that there will be value added, instead of just exporting it as raw material.

In a news statement issued on Thursday, the Trade department said, “They [Glencore] see the Philippine­s as a potential partner to process nickel and copper resources responsibl­y and sustainabi­lity for use in electric vehicle batteries and energy storage units, among others.”

Glencore is one of the largest and “globally diversifie­d” natural resource companies in the world.

According to its web site, Glencore extracts and processes copper ore in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Australia and South America. The Swiss multinatio­nal firm added that it recycles copper scrap. Moreover, it smelts and refines copper.

The natural resource firm said it supplies a wide range of customers from the automotive, electronic­s and constructi­on sectors.

As for nickel, Glencore said, it is a “leading producer and marketer of nickel, as well as a recycler of nickel-containing materials such as batteries.”

“We produce some of the world’s purest nickel. Our marketing business markets nickel and nickel concentrat­es, as well as by-products and ferronicke­l. Our nickel operations are in Canada, Australia, Norway, and New Caledonia,” Glencore said on its web site.

The Philippine­s’s trade chief has always sought assistance from government­s and private sectors of different countries such as Germany and South Korea, among others, to tap the Philippine­s’s “significan­t” green metal reserves of nickel and copper.

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