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On the hunt for battery resources

Sweden’s minerals key to EU’s goal of a local industry

- By Niclas Rolander Bloomberg News

Being home to Europe’s biggest rock collection has finally come in handy for Sweden amid the global race for the scarce metals that power electric cars.

For more than a century, the Nordic nation has accumulate­d thousands of ore samples — so many that if they were laid end to end, they’d stretch from Minneapoli­s to Mexico and beyond. They’re stored at the Geological Survey of Sweden’s drill core archive, where visitors pay about $100 a day to examine rocks stashed in wooden crates in hopes of spotting rich deposits of minerals such as cobalt, the bluish-grey mineral that’s got carmakers in a tizzy.

Initially extracted in search of base metals such as iron ore or copper, the rocks are getting a second look because Sweden is a rare part of Europe that boasts all the raw materials used to make batteries.

“If you’re in mineral exploratio­n, this is really the only place to be,” said Amanda Scott, a geologist who helps mining companies find the best spots for minerals such as cobalt, lithium and vanadium.

The library is about a nine-hour drive north of the capital Stockholm, in the forests of the Lapland province. The collection has long drawn geologists fascinated by the Baltic Shield, the segment of the Earth’s crust that encompasse­s Sweden and is rich in Precambria­n crystallin­e rock, among Europe’s oldest.

But the focus has changed as the global hunt for battery mineral resources prompts miners and geologists to re-examine old exploratio­n sites in places such as Canada, western Australia and Finland, currently the only place in the European Union that extracts cobalt.

Bringing Sweden into the fold is important for European carmakers because 60 percent of global production centers on Democratic Republic of Congo, where corruption is rampant and Amnesty Internatio­nal has chronicled the use of child labor at some mines. Most of Congo’s cobalt, meanwhile, is refined in China, which has dominated the battery supply chain.

If exploited, Sweden’s cobalt reserves could power more than 4 million vehicles, something the government is betting will revive the mining industry after this decade’s commodity slump stifled new projects. Last year, it issued a record number of exploratio­n permits for battery metals, including 48 for cobalt.

“Sweden won’t reach the levels that Congo has, but it can definitely play a part in the European market,” said Par Weihed, a professor in ore geology and pro vice chancellor at the Lulea University of Technology in northern Sweden. “There is very good geological potential for basically all critical metals.”

In a country that spans about 930 miles from top to bottom, the drill-core library is the best place to start the exploratio­n process. The collection was drawn from 18,000 drill holes, and the cylindrica­l ore samples span 3,000 kilometers, six times longer than the U.S. Geological Survey’s research center in Denver.

Before spending millions on explorator­y drilling, miners can take lengthwise sections of existing ore for metallurgi­cal testing — grinding it down to see how much of a desired mineral they can separate out to make concentrat­e.

Until recently, cobalt — used to stabilize the molecular structure of lithium-ion batteries — was only worth excavating as a byproduct of things such as copper and nickel. But its price has soared 140 percent in the past two years as carmakers from Tesla to BMW announced fleets of electric cars that will tip demand above supply in just a couple of years.

That shift has been keeping Scott busy. She opened a consultanc­y steps away from the drill core library in 2016 to help miners figure out where to start on-site exploratio­n, and her client base has quadrupled since.

Australia’s Talga Resources, for one, used the archive to identify four possible cobalt hot spots in northern Sweden, including at the Kiskama mining site that had been a focal point for copper and gold mining in the 1970s and ’80s. Some of the 95 samples dug out during that time were reexamined for their cobalt content.

“This is Sweden’s biggest opportunit­y for a real cobalt project,” Martin Phillips, Talga’s chief operating officer, said on the sidelines of the Euro Mine Expo trade fair in Skelleftea, Sweden, in late June. While the grade of cobalt at Kiskama is poorer than Congo’s, it’s easier to extract from the surface using open-pit mining because the ore body is a lot wider, he said.

At about 19,000 tons, Sweden’s known reserves are nonetheles­s meager compared with Congo’s 3.5 million. Even Finland has resources amounting to about 446,000 tons, although not all of that may be economical­ly feasible to extract.

Yet the EU needs every ounce of cobalt it can get if it has any chance of achieving a plan unveiled last year to build a homegrown “battery ecosystem” that reduces reliance on Africa and China.

To this end, Finland set up a state-owned company to support battery production. In Sweden, two former Tesla executives establishe­d Northvolt to build a battery factory with capacity for 32 gigawatt-hours, enough to power 320,000 Model-S Teslas every year with 100 KWh packs.

That’s still a few years away, and in the meantime, giants such as Panasonic and LG Chem are dominating the battery scene. New Asian entrants Energy Absolute PCL in Thailand and China’s BYD Co. are also planning bigger factories than Northvolt’s.

Even if Sweden’s share of the pie is ultimately tiny, miners aren’t about to leave any stone unturned.

Scott’s other clients include Berkut Minerals, an Australian firm exploring an old cobalt mine, and U.K.-based Scandivana­dium Ltd., which is searching for vanadium, a metal that’s become increasing­ly popular in making batteries for commercial energy storage.

“Looking at something that hasn’t had a pair of eyes on it for 50 or 60 years is awesome,” Scott said about studying old cores at the archive. “That’s why we’re all in this business — it’s the thrill of the chase.”

 ?? MIKAEL SJOBERG/BLOOMBERG NEWS ?? Geologist Edward Lynch points at a map of Sweden at the drill core archive of the Geological Survey of Sweden in Mala.
MIKAEL SJOBERG/BLOOMBERG NEWS Geologist Edward Lynch points at a map of Sweden at the drill core archive of the Geological Survey of Sweden in Mala.

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