Metals

Federal and WA governments unite to support nickel and lithium producers

CBCIE Time:Jan 25, 2024 15:21 Source:smallcaps

The federal and Western Australia governments have vowed to support local nickel and lithium producers as price weakness continues to plague both sectors and impact projects.

Federal Minister for Resources Madeleine King and WA Minister for Mines David Michael have agreed to meet with nickel and lithium producers to discuss challenges facing the industry and to inform possible responses from government.

The ministers will sit down with heads of resources companies in Perth tomorrow.

Representatives from the Chamber of Minerals and Energy WA, Association of Mining and Exploration Companies, Minerals Council of Australia and relevant unions will also be in attendance.

The ministers noted that nickel is currently subject to an oversupply in the market that has resulted in lower prices, while lithium’s price volatility is due in part to the concentration of supply chains.

The scheduled round-tables will discuss these issues as part of efforts to more fully understand the challenges involved and will also consider possible steps to help Australian companies be more competitive in the global market.

“Fluctuations in the nickel and lithium markets are having an impact on our domestic minerals industry,” Minister King said.

“Lithium and nickel are both crucial to the energy transition as we decarbonise. The mining of these resources supports many local jobs.”

Iron ore and coal strong

Despite the current lithium and nickel chaos, business turnover for the mining industry actually rose 4.9% in November, the fourth consecutive monthly increase, according to new figures released by the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

ABS head of business statistics Robert Ewing said the recent rises in mining turnover were due to higher iron ore prices and renewed demand for coal.

However, mining saw the largest decrease on an annual basis at (-8.7%), ahead of electricity, gas, water and waste services (-3.9%) and transport, postal and warehousing (-2.7%).

General economy remains robust

In the broader economy, ten of 13 industries saw rises in business turnover in November.

“This included arts and recreation services (up 6.2%), retail trade and transport [and] postal and warehousing (both 1.0% gains), as retailers and parcel delivery businesses benefited from the Black Friday sales period,” according to the ABS.

Ten of the 13 industries included in the indicator also rose on a year-on-year basis.

Industries that saw the biggest annual rises were construction (15.2%), accommodation and food services (8.1%) and other services (7.8%).

All articles, pictures, reports and other original works on the website that are attributed to CBCIE are non-public information, only for members. No one may reproduce or otherwise use the original content of this website without our permission. If you need to use it, please call
+86 18135172048 to apply for authorisation. CBCIE reserves the right to pursue any infringement and citation contrary to the original intent.

Disclaimer:CBCIE is committed to building a comprehensive and authoritative metal information platform, and strives to provide a full range of data and information services and decision-making support for metal industry researchers and practitioners. However, the information on this website is for reference only and is not intended as direct advice for investors' decision-making. Any investment, purchase, sale or operation based on the information on this website should be at your own risk and is not related to CBCIE.

CBC Lithium Product Navigation

Precursor

Ternary Precursor

Cathode Material

Other Lithium Products

Contact us

Contact us for more CBC information and services.

Get in touch
CBC专家咨询 关闭
2025-2030年报预订 关闭
close
WeCom

CS Manager:
Zizhen Zhang

+86 18135172048