Metals

Canadian graphite miner NMG scores deals with GM, Panasonic

CBCIE Time:Feb 19, 2024 14:25 Source:mining

Nouveau Monde Graphite inked on Thursday multi-year offtake agreements with General Motors and Panasonic Holdings, with both companies also vowing to invest in the Canadian miner to help it produce high-quality graphite in North America.

GM and Panasonic have each committed to purchase 18,000 tonnes of  natural graphite active anode material annually over a period of six to seven years, the Montreal-based miner said. They are also making equity investments of $25 million each in the company.

The two firms and potential co-investors could join future rounds of financing worth hundreds of millions of dollars, Nouveau Monde Graphite (NGM) said in a statement.

NGM aims to raise $1.2 billion to build the whole project, with $725 million coming from debt and $475 million from equity. The miner aims to become North America’s first fully integrated source of natural graphite active anode material, which accounts for about half of an electric vehicle (EV) battery. 

To achieve this goal, it is is developing the Matawinie project in Saint-Michel-des-Saints, Quebec, about 100 miles north of Montreal, where it also plans to build a graphite concentrator. 

NMG will also install a refining facility for the production of active anode material in Becancour, Quebec. This is the same area where GM and Ford Motor Co. are already constructing EV battery-component facilities.

The Matawinie open pit mine is expected to produce 103,000 tonnes of graphite a year over the course of 25 years and is part of a larger strategy to turn Canada into a production centre for lithium ion batteries. 

The miner said the investments and agreements are seen as a testament to the company’s bankability and are expected to boost the commercialization of a local and traceable value chain for the EV market in North America.

“We had been looking for top-tier EV and battery manufacturers to bolster our commercial vision [of becoming a leader in the market],” NMG’s founder, president and chief executive, Eric Desaulniers, said in a statement. “Thanks to visionary customers and investors, we are now moving toward establishing a fully local and traceable value chain.”

NMG is also backed by the Quebec government’s financial arm, London-based private equity shop Pallinghurst Resources LLP and Japan’s Mitsui & Co. 

The West is looking for sources of graphite outside China, the world’s top producer and exporter, which also refines more than 90% of the world’s graphite into the material that is used in virtually all EV battery anodes.

The quest to bring graphite projects to fruition has become more urgent in the past months, as China announced in October it will require export permits for some graphite products.

NMG said its recent acquisition of the Uatnan project for its Phase-3 expansion also provides a supply opportunity for Western EV and battery manufacturers looking to secure and grow active anode material volumes as their production increases.

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.

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