-->
American Resources Policy Network
Promoting the development of American mineral resources.
  • Russia’s War on Ukraine Hits Critical Mineral Supply Chains: A Look at Nickel

     While in the early days of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, concerns over how the war would impact global supply chains were mostly focused on oil and natural gas, it quickly became apparent that the ramifications of drawn-out hostilities would stretch far beyond the global oil and gas sector.

    With Ukraine considered the “breadbasket of Europe,” Russia’s invasion of the country stands to take a toll on the food supply chain.   And, as the war enters its fourth week, the writing is on the wall: For European consumers, it’s 2020 all over again with empty shelves in the grocery store – just this time the run is not on the toilet paper aisle, but rather, pantry staples like flour and cooking oil.

    On the critical minerals front, ARPN has discussed looming supply crunches and implications for the United States using the example of titanium, but effects of the war can be felt across the spectrum of critical minerals.

    As a case in point, consider nickel.  With Russia’s assault on Ukraine deepening, nickel prices jumped as much as 250% in just two days earlier in March, leading the London Metal Exchange to suspend trading for the metal. As Reuters’s Andy Home observed“[w]hat Russia terms its ‘special operation’ has broken the LME nickel contract and forced the exchange to impose emergency measures across the rest of its core base metal contracts.”  Nickel has since reached a decade high of $25,000 per ton.

    A critical ingredient in lithium-ion battery technology, nickel’s abrupt price surge has analysts and investors worried about automakers’ electric-vehicle ambitions, which are at the heart of the global push for achieving net zero carbon emissions.

    Even before Russia’s euphemistically self-proclaimed “special operation” in Ukraine, experts and stakeholders were raising the alarm about a likely supply shortage for nickel as automakers shifted to EV production, with warnings that global demand for EV battery grade nickel could outstrip supply by 2024.  Perhaps most famous is Tesla founder and CEO Elon Musk’s call on global mining companies to boost production of nickel in early 2020, when he publicly announced:

    “Any mining companies out there … wherever you are in the world, please mine more nickel. (…)  Tesla will give you a giant contract for a long period of time if you mine nickel efficiently and in an environmentally sensitive way. (…) Don’t wait for nickel to go back to some high point you experienced five years ago (…).”

    Thankfully, for U.S. consumers and manufacturers, the message appears to have begun to resonate, and while we can argue that it has taken far too long for U.S. stakeholders to realize the seriousness of the situation, there are indications for a momentum shift.

    The Biden Administration last month announced several “major investments in domestic production of key critical minerals and materials, ensuring these resources benefit the community, and creating good-paying, union jobs in sustainable production,” following in the wake of the Administration’s 100-day supply chain report.

    Meanwhile, with the stakes raised significantly in light of the war on Ukraine, U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Joe Manchin (D-WV), James Risch (R-ID), and Bill Cassidy (R-LA), sent a letter to President Biden last week urging the him to take congressional and Administration efforts to bolster mineral supply chains one step further and to “invoke the Defense Production Act (DPA) to accelerate domestic production of lithium-ion battery materials, in particular graphite, manganese, cobalt, nickel, and lithium.”

    While President Joe Biden missed an opportunity to convey the urgency of the critical minerals supply challenge with the American people during his first State of the Union Address early this month, new reports that “US regulators are warming to approving new domestic sources of electric vehicle battery metals, as Washington bids to avoid a reliance on strategic minerals imports similar to that on crude oil,” are encouraging.

    Mining Weekly cites U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer Granholm and other officials speaking at an energy conference earlier this week as stating that “the need to domestically produce more metals is rising as EV’s go mainstream, but that new mines must not harm the environment.”

    The good news is that the mining industry is ready to meet this challenge. Having recognized “[its] responsibility and trying to meet the increased expectations of consumers, society and governments” to contribute towards the push towards a greener energy future, the industry  has increasingly been harnessing advances in materials science and technology to help develop domestic critical minerals supplies while maintaining and advancing responsible mining practices.

    ARPN has highlighted industry initiatives on numerous occasions, and will continue to do so.

    In the nickel realm, Tesla’s recent deal with Talon Metals Corp comes to mind, in which Elon Musk chose the company’s Tamarack mining project site in Minnesota, “due to plans to make the electric vehicle battery metal in a way it considers more environmentally friendly.”

    Followers of ARPN may recall that this is the mine site for which the U.S. Department of Energy recently announced a $2.2. million award to fund to a Rio Tinto-led project with joint-venture partner Talon Metals Corp. to achieve carbon capture by a process that mineralizes the carbon in rock – a process far more stable than methods that inject carbon, where it remains vulnerable to seepage and fracturing due to earthquakes.

    As Senators Murkowski, Manchin, Risch, and Cassidy argued in their letter to President Biden:

    “Allowing our foreign mineral dependence to persist is a growing threat to U.S. national security, and we need to take every step to address it. The 100-day report acknowledges the ‘powerful tool’ the DPA has been to expand production of supplies needed to combat COVID-19, as well as the potential the DPA could have to ‘support investment in other critical sectors and enable industry and government to collaborate more effectively.’  The time is now to grow, support, and encourage investment in the domestic production of graphite, manganese, cobalt, lithium, nickel, and other critical minerals to ensure we support our national security, and to fulfill our need for lithium-ion batteries – both for consumers and for the Department of Defense.”

    Share
  • U.S. Senators to President Biden: With Stakes Raised, Time to Invoke the Defense Production Act to Secure Critical Mineral Supply Chains

    Already severely strained by the coronavirus pandemic, global critical mineral resource supply chains have taken another hit with Russia’s full-fledged invasion of Ukraine.  With no de-escalation of hostilities in sight, Western nations, including the United States, are stepping up their efforts to bolster domestic supply chains, not only for oil and gas, but also for non-fuel minerals, and particularly for the materials underpinning the green energy transition.

    While the Biden Administration last month announced several “major investments in domestic production of key critical minerals and materials, ensuring these resources benefit the community, and creating good-paying, union jobs in sustainable production,” President Joe Biden missed an opportunity to convey the urgency of the critical minerals supply challenge with the American people during his first State of the Union Address.

    With the stakes raised significantly since the Biden Administration’s investment announcement in February in light of the war on Ukraine, U.S. Senators Lisa Murkowski (R-AK), Joe Manchin (D-WV), James Risch (R-ID), and Bill Cassidy (R-LA), sent a letter to President Biden today urging the him to take congressional and Administration efforts to bolster mineral supply chains one step further and to “invoke the Defense Production Act (DPA) to accelerate domestic production of lithium-ion battery materials, in particular graphite, manganese, cobalt, nickel, and lithium.”

    Write the Senators:

    “China not only leads the world in manufacture of lithium-ion batteries, but also in the processing of the minerals and raw materials required in lithium-ion battery manufacturing. The United States’ import reliance on graphite and manganese, essential to the lithium-ion batteries required for commercial technology sector like electric vehicles and energy storage systems, is also a hindrance for major weapons platforms and defense capabilities, from UAVs and space defense systems to our warfighters in the field.”

    They add:

    “Our dependence on foreign sourced cobalt and lithium is elevated as the processing of both is dominated by China. China is clearly willing to utilize any means at hand – such as exploiting its workforce through harsh labor conditions, using mining processes outside of international practice, espionage, and IP theft – to establish technological dominance over the United States.”

    Arguing that China dominating the processing segment of both the cobalt and lithium supply chains, and is willing to utilize “any means at hand (…)” to “establish technological dominance over the United States,” they conclude:

    “Allowing our foreign mineral dependence to persist is a growing threat to U.S. national security, and we need to take every step to address it. The 100-day report acknowledges the ‘powerful tool’ the DPA has been to expand production of supplies needed to combat COVID-19, as well as the potential the DPA could have to ‘support investment in other critical sectors and enable industry and government to collaborate more effectively.’  The time is now to grow, support, and encourage investment in the domestic production of graphite, manganese, cobalt, lithium, nickel, and other critical minerals to ensure we support our national security, and to fulfill our need for lithium-ion batteries – both for consumers and for the Department of Defense.”

    Read the full letter here.

    Share
  • The Stakes Just Got Higher – The State of U.S. Critical Mineral Resource Security

    Set to deliver his first State of the Union address today (March 1, 2022), U.S. President Joe Biden will likely have to tweak the outline for his speech considering the latest developments in Ukraine, and the resulting implications for the United States, and the world as a whole. Against growing tensions, we recently highlighted mounting [...]
  • Beyond the Battery Criticals and the Green Energy Transition – Megacities to Drive Metals Demand

    By now it has been well established – and we have covered this fact on numerous occasions — that the global push towards net zero carbon will require massive amounts of metals and minerals underpinning renewable energy technology supporting the shift. Here, the mainstream media largely focuses on covering material needs to achieve climate goals [...]
  • Time for a Reckoning at “Ferrari Supercar Speeds” – It’s Not Just Battery Materials: A Look at Aluminum

    In recent months, industry news has been dominated by headlines like “carmakers face raw material bottleneck.” And while, rightfully, against the backdrop of the accelerating green energy transition and EV revolution, much of the coverage focuses primarily on supply chain challenges arising for the battery criticals Lithium, Cobalt, Nickel, Graphite and Manganese, it’s not just the [...]
  • USGS Mineral Commodity Summaries 2022 — Amidst Greater Focus on Supply Chain Security, Mineral Resource Dependence Persists

    We’ve named it the year of the Supply Chain, noting that others said “2021 is the year ‘supply chain’ went from jargon to meme.” While an increased focus on the supply chain was undoubtedly a critical development in the mineral resource realm, and several steps to increase supply chain security for critical minerals were taken in [...]
  • ARPN’s 2021 Word of the Year: Supply Chain

    ARPN’s Year in Review —   a Last Look Back at the United States’ Critical Mineral Resource Challenge in 2021 Well, two words, for the sticklers.  Merriam Webster may have gone with “vaccine,” but for ARPN, there was really no doubt. As one article put it, “2021 is the year ‘supply chain’ went from jargon to [...]
  • ARPN’s Daniel McGroarty Submits Public Comment on Draft Updated Critical Minerals List

    On November 9, 2021, the U.S. Geological Survey announced it is seeking public comment on a draft revised List of Critical Minerals. The revised  list is an update to the United States’ first whole-of-government Critical Minerals List released in 2018 and developed in consultation with other cabinet agencies pursuant to Executive Order 13817. Later codified into law, the [...]
  • Securing the Supply Chain — “If Tesla’s Got Troubles, Everyone Should Worry”

    Every December, editors of the English-speaking world’s dictionaries release their choices for Word of the Year, a “word or expression that has attracted a great deal of interest over the last 12 months.” Unsurprisingly, for 2020, the honorees were coronavirus-related terms, with Merriam-Webster and Dictionary.com bestowing the honor on the word “Pandemic,” whereas the Collins Dictionary Word of the [...]
  • “Mining Sector Workhorse” Can “Pull America’s EV Ambition Cart”

    At the 2021 Climate Change Conference (COP26) held in Glasgow, Scotland this November, several automakers joined scores of territories and countries, signing a commitment calling on automakers to sell only zero-emission vehicles by 2040. In light of this development, recent Biden Administration pledges to similar effects, and the acceleration of overall electrification trends we have [...]

Archives