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Australian resources firms brace for coronavirus impact

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 05/03/20

Australia's resources firms are drawing up contingency plans for the potential impact from the spread of the coronavirus on their supply chains, production and personnel.

The Chamber of Minerals and Energy of Western Australia (WA) has organised a meeting in Perth tomorrow of executives of resources firms to discuss measures, including the risk of the coronavirus affecting their thousands of fly-in, fly-out (FIFO) workers.

WA is estimated to have around 60,000 FIFO workers that work at remote mine sites and onshore and offshore oil and gas plants. Companies operating in Queensland, the Northern Territory and South Australia are also expected to implement coronavirus contingency plans.

There is a risk that FIFO workers that spend their rostered leave in Asia could be potential carriers to remote mining areas or oil and gas installations. This will require special screening and quarantining if necessary. Some mining companies' emergency business continuity plans aim to keep projects operational in case of a coronavirus outbreak.

Travel by mining companies has been sharply reduced with many firms limiting trips to essential journeys only. A battery metals conference in Perth scheduled for 4-5 March has been indefinitely postponed. The World Copper Conference scheduled for 23-25 March in Santiago, Chile has been cancelled.

Mining production may have to be reduced over the next few months, warned ANZ bank chief economist Richard Yetsenga. Instead of stocks building up at consumer destinations such as China, producers could have to cut back on output, he said.

China's steel inventories have swelled because of reduced construction activity following its coronavirus outbreak. This could reduce demand for steel feedstocks such as iron ore, steel hardening alloy manganese and coking coal. If stainless steel and aluminium inventories grow, inputs such as nickel, alumina and bauxite will be affected.

Lithium producers had already reduced their output of China-bound concentrate last year in response to weaker demand and lower prices.

By Angus Macmillan


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14/03/25

EU finds no dumping on India HRC

EU finds no dumping on India HRC

London, 14 March (Argus) — A pre-disclosure to the EU's anti-dumping investigation found no dumping on hot-rolled coil (HRC) imports from India, while imposing provisional duties on Egypt, Japan and Vietnam in a range of 6.9-33pc from 7 April. Japan's Nippon Steel faces one of the highest import duties, at 33pc, while benchmark mill Tokyo Steel has the lowest, at 6.9pc. Fellow Japanese steelmakers Daido Steel and JFE Steel will be taxed at 32pc. All other Japanese producers will have a provisional duty of 33pc. Material from Vietnam will be subject to a 12.1pc duty, while Egyptian exporters face a 15.6pc tax. No provisional duties are proposed for imports from Vietnam's Hoa Phat, according to a leaked document from the European Commission. Egypt, Japan and Vietnam sold 2.2mn t of HRC into the EU last year, accounting for around 25pc of total imports. Egypt sold 694,000t, Japan 860,000t and Vietnam 727,000t. Indian imports will be unconstrained, as they are subject to a 0pc duty. It shipped 1.2mn t into its own quota last year. India was the most affected HRC supplier by the safeguard review, with imports from the country falling by 23pc to 225,000 t/quarter. The provisional rates mean Vietnamese HRC will remain easily workable into the EU, and the duties will have little impact on the volume of supply from the country — apart from the limitations already imposed by the safeguard review, which limits imports from other countries to around 111,000 t/quarter. Egypt would be "cooked", a trader said, with its import volumes likely to decline substantially, if the provisional duties become definitive. Prices in the EU are less likely to increase if these duty rates are imposed, and because the safeguard review results earlier in the week were less stringent than expected, a buyer said. The low duties on Vietnamese material — below most market expectations — will be welcomed by large re-rollers that account for a high share of the country's exports to the EU. Definitive measures are expected by 7 October. By Lora Stoyanova and Colin Richardson EU HRC provisional anti-dumping duties % Mill Provisional duty Japan Nippon Steel 33.0 Tokyo Steel 6.9 Daido Steel 32.0 JFE Steel 32.0 All others 33.0 Egypt Ezz Steel 15.6 All others 15.6 Vietnam Formosa Ha Tinh 12.1 All others* 12.1 India All mills 0† * No duties on Hoa Phat Dung Quat †no dumping found - EC Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Korea's Samsung SDI to raise funds for battery growth


14/03/25
14/03/25

Korea's Samsung SDI to raise funds for battery growth

Singapore, 14 March (Argus) — South Korean battery maker Samsung SDI is looking to raise 2 trillion Korean won ($1.38bn) to fuel its battery production developments, citing a Hungary plant expansion and its joint venture investment with US carmaker General Motors (GM). The capital raise is based on the mid- to long-term growth prospects of the electric vehicle battery market, given that battery facility investments take 2-3 years to reach mass production, said the firm on 14 March. Samsung SDI previously flagged that it intends to expand its plant in Hungary's God to 40 GWh/yr. The firm in August 2024 signed an agreement with GM to build a two-phase nickel-cobalt-aluminum battery plant that is expected to have a final production capacity of 36 GWh/yr in New Carlisle, Indiana. The joint venture investment will take around $3.5bn. The proceeds will also be used to invest in solid-state battery line facilities in South Korea, said Samsung SDI. The firm launched its first all solid-state battery pilot line back in March 2022 and aims to mass produce solid-state batteries in 2027, which are more stable and have high energy density, it said last year. Its facility investment has quadrupled from W1.7 trillion in 2019 to W6.6 trillion last year, but Samsung SDI expects this to shrink this year, citing "investment efficiency". Samsung SDI's battery usage fell by almost 11pc to 29.6GWh in 2024, according to data from South Korean market intelligence firm SNE Research, given a decline in demand from major car original equipment manufacturers in Europe and North America. By Joseph Ho Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia's Liontown to transition Li mine underground


14/03/25
14/03/25

Australia's Liontown to transition Li mine underground

Sydney, 14 March (Argus) — Australian lithium producer Liontown Resources is on-track to transition its Kathleen Valley mine from an open pit to an underground site in order to extract higher-grade ore. The company started mining underground at the 2.8mn t/yr site in November 2023 and plans to entirely stop open pit operations by January-March 2026. Liontown will start ramping up its underground operations starting in April-June 2025, it announced in its July-December 2024 half year report on 14 March. The company has also increased the efficiency of its open pit operations in recent months. Liontown cut its Kathleen Valley waste to ore ratio from 5.1 in July-September to 1.25 in October-December, and increased concentrate production at the site from 28,171t to 88,683t over the same period. The company's recent combined output and efficiency improvements softened losses for the quarter. The company posted losses of A$15.1mn ($9.5mn) in July-December 2024, down from A$30.9mn in the same period in 2023. Liontown highlighted low spot spodumene and lithium chemical prices as a source of concern despite its recent financial improvement. But Kathleen Valley's increasing efficiency could mitigate ongoing price challenges, the company said. Argus -assessed lithium concentrate (spodumene) 6pc Li2O cif China price has decreased sharply since it was first assessed in May 2022, falling from $4,925/t to $875/t over 17 May 2022-11 March 2025. But the price has been increasing over recent months despite the long-term decline, rising from $835/t on 17 December 2024. By Avinash Govind Argus' spodumene price (May 2022-March 2025) ($/t) Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Steelmaker Gerdau to buy Kloeckner's Brazil assets


13/03/25
13/03/25

Steelmaker Gerdau to buy Kloeckner's Brazil assets

Sao Paulo, 13 March (Argus) — Brazilian steelmaker Gerdau closed a deal to acquire German metals service centre Kloeckner's operations in Parana, Brazil, for an undisclosed value. Gerdau, historically a long steel producer, has been investing in flat steel assets. The company this week inaugurated its expanded hot-rolling mill, boosting hot-rolled coil (HRC) capacity by 30pc to 1.1mn t/yr. The company has submitted a request to Brazil's antitrust watchdog Cade seeking approval for the acquisition, before completing the transaction. Kloeckner has operated in Brazil since 2011, following its acquisition of 70pc of Frefer Metal Plus assets. Last October, the German company announced that it will exit the Brazilian metals market, aligning with its strategy to concentrate investments in European and North American markets. Besides Parana, Kloeckner has plants in Sao Paulo and Rio Grande do Sul. By Isabel Filgueiras Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US steel tariffs may prove import equalizer


13/03/25
13/03/25

US steel tariffs may prove import equalizer

Houston, 13 March (Argus) — The removal of steel import quotas and nontariffed systems by the US, even as President Donald Trump reimposes steel tariffs, may help level the international playing field, allowing countries that have been unable to compete for years in the US steel market a chance to sell steel into the country. Buying interest for steel imported to the US from countries that have not been able to be competitive for years has grown in recent weeks. US buyers told Argus that skyrocketing US prices — combined with the reimposition of 25pc Section 232 steel tariffs on countries with tariff rate quotas (TRQs) and non-tariffed steel — has reopened some markets. The 25pc 232 tariffs have been in effect since March 2018, but many countries have received exemptions and TRQs, with 80pc of US steel imports coming from these excluded countries and not incurring the 25pc tax, according to US Department of Commerce data. The equalizing of the trade barrier to cover all imports could allow countries like Turkey — which used to be a major source of imported steel into the US — to restart some trade flows to the country, as global prices remain at a wide discount to US prices. Domestic buyers want imports US service centers interested in diversifying their purchases with lower-priced foreign steel and importers interested in selling the material said wide deltas between US steel prices and imports made imported offers from at least a half dozen countries more attractive over the last few weeks. The Argus US hot-rolled coil (HRC) Midwest and southern assessments both rose week on week by $15/short ton (st) to $935/st on 11 March, while the HRC import assessment jumped by $80/st to $800/st DDP Houston, Texas. The wide spread between domestic and import prices serves as motivation for US buyers to purchase imported steel. Tens of thousands of tons of cold-rolled coil (CRC) and HRC from Turkey may begin to flow into the US, according to some buyers. Prior to the original imposition of the 25pc 232 tariffs, Turkey exported 1.98mn metric tonnes (t) of steel products to the US in 2017. Since tariffs were implemented volumes have plummeted, reaching only 391,400t in 2024, according to the Commerce Department. Other buyers have recently reported purchasing South Korean HRC imports, after that country's mills spent months considering pricing as they awaited clarity on whether the country — which used to have TRQs — would be granted exemptions by Trump. So far Trump has not granted any country exemptions from the reinstated 232 tariffs. Tons from Turkey and South Korea are expected by mid-year. HRC import bids were also heard from mills in Australia, Brazil, Egypt, and Vietnam — countries that had not been active into the US for HRC in many months. Trade policies concerns abound A concern for US steel importers is that Trump could rapidly change his trade policies and add new tariffs to imports, increasing the duty costs when steel arrives. Such risks have reared their heads over the last two weeks with back-and-forth tariff spats between the US, Canada and Mexico. To mitigate the risk, most buyers have booked less than they otherwise would, though many believe there will be a rise in some import volumes come mid-2025. Steel imports from countries without tariffs or with TRQs made up 80pc of the 26.2mn t (28.9mn st) of total steel products imported in 2024. In 2017, the year before tariffs were imposed, approximately 70pc of total steel imports came from those countries, according to US Department of Commerce data. With this latest round of 232 tariffs, Trump appears less likely to negotiate new TRQs or exemptions, with the tariff exclusion mechanism that allowed companies to file to have specific products not taxed no longer active. Countries like Australia and Japan were reportedly denied new exemptions in recent negotiations, even as both countries had nontariffed mechanisms in place under the prior scheme. Domestic companies, particularly steelmakers, can and have filed to have tariffs placed on steel derivative products, which opens up a whole new class of products to the risk of having 25pc tariffs placed on them as Trump attempts to bring manufacturing back to the US. By Rye Druzchetta US steel imports by country t Country 2024 2023 2018 2017 Canada 5,952,054 6,248,393 5,646,641 5,675,816 Brazil 4,080,695 3,576,002 3,984,681 4,665,428 Mexico 3,194,752 3,799,057 3,498,308 3,155,117 South Korea 2,548,877 2,392,320 2,507,860 3,401,405 Vietnam 1,237,055 508,232 1,006,702 679,129 Japan 1,070,681 1,078,222 1,370,406 1,727,844 Germany 975,878 947,322 1,253,356 1,380,434 Taiwan 917,760 525,685 966,393 1,128,356 Netherland 556,877 460,678 556,515 636,900 China 470,197 553,406 649,138 763,036 Turkey 391,444 283,198 1,045,592 1,977,866 Russia 0 4 2,296,781 2,866,695 Total 26,224,660 25,583,087 30,573,529 34,472,507 US Department of Commerce Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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