Perspectives on Cobalt Supply through 2030 in the Face of Changing Demand
Article 2020 en
Authors
XF
Xinkai Fu
DB
Danielle N. Beatty
GG
Gabrielle Gaustad
Abstract
1 min read
Lithium-ion battery demand, particularly for electric vehicles, is projected to increase by over 300% throughout the next decade. With these expected increases in demand, cobalt (Co)-dependent technologies face the risk of significant impact from supply concentration and mining limitations in the short term. Increased extraction and secondary recovery form the basis of modeling scenarios that examine implications on Co supply to 2030. Demand for Co is estimated to range from 235 to 430 ktonnes in 2030. This upper bound on Co demand in 2030 corresponds to 280% of world refinery capacity in 2016. Supply from scheduled and unscheduled production as well as secondary production is estimated to range from 320 to 460 ktonnes. Our analysis suggests the following: (1) Co price will remain relatively stable in the short term, given that this range suggests even a supply surplus, (2) future Co supply will become more diversified geographically and mined more as a byproduct of nickel (Ni) over this period, and (3) for this demand to be met, attention should be paid to sustained investments in refined supply of Co and secondary recovery.
Stuart Borlase, Sahand Behboodi, Thomas H. Bradley, Miguel Brandao, David P. Chassin, J.H.R. Enslin, C.B. McCarthy, Stuart Borlase, Thomas H. Bradley, David P. Chassin, J.H.R. Enslin, Gale Horst, Régis Hourdouillie, Salman Mohagheghi, Casey Quinn, Julio Romero Agüero, Aleksandar Vukojevic, Bartosz Wojszczyk, Eric Woychik, Alex Zheng, Daniel Zimmerle
Discussion(0)
No comments yet. Be the first to comment.