HGO 0.00% 5.5¢ hillgrove resources limited

Ann: Kanmantoo South Hub Cu-Au Growth Opportunity, page-14

  1. 2,279 Posts.
    lightbulb Created with Sketch. 261
    Here it is, it just gives more data on the situation:

    Why is nobody buying the copper needed for a greener world?


    Recycling old metal does not do the job because the green economy is more metal intensive

    There is no longer much dissent over the need for a global decarbonisation policy. Even the Russian government is indicating it will sign the Paris climate accords. International oil companies talk about their products as “transition” fuels and scatter pictures of biofuel production and solar panels throughout their annual reports.
    Greta Thunberg is no longer a girl but an icon. People would burn votive candles in front of her picture, but that would add to the emissions burden.So why does nobody wants to buy the copper required for a greening world? Over the past month every global forum with a serious carbon footprint has agreed we have to stop emitting that stuff.Renewable energy resources have been nodded at by all these assemblies of respectable and important people. Wind and solar, though, requires three to 15 times as much copper per unit of output as fossil fuel generation. This is after decades of technological development and efficiency improvements.Some metals can be traded off against one another. Tesla reduced the cobalt content of its cars’ batteries and increased the nickel content. Then it raised the cobalt content again when cobalt prices fell and reliability questions became sharper. Copper content, though, is hard to engineer away. The easy substitutions of aluminium have already been done. Copper is just too heat- and electricity-conductive to be wished away.Yet the price of copper tried, feebly, to get out of its sickbed at the end of the summer, only to fall back again after the middle of September. At the beginning of October, the LME copper price has barely kept above $5,600 a tonne. That is above the cash operating costs for existing mines, but nowhere near enough to draw investment to new mines, assuming someone has found the stuff, measured the deposit, laid out transportation and water supplies, and arranged all the permits.Mining equities prices are drifting to the sea floor, their remains only retaining some buoyancy through their inclusion in ETFs and broad indices.
    Oil and gas exploration and production companies may have their ups and downs, but at least there’s a market for shares in those with operating cash flow and positions in the right producing basins.That is no longer the case for “junior” metals mining companies. Jeffrey Christian, chief executive of CPM Group, a metals statistical and advisory service, says: “Junior mining is dead. I have been running CPM Group for 33 years, and for 32 of those years we were talking to people about investing in mining companies or metal. Now institutional and retail investors are simply not investing in junior mining companies, because they have lost money at it for so long.“Instead, we are working on three continents with governments and industry associations to see what can be done about [the lack of new mine investment]. No one wants mining, but they want the product.”Junior mining companies were long easy to caricature as tools of sleazy Vancouver or Sydney promoters, holes in the ground with liars on top etc etc. But they have been essential to the ecology of how people get metal to make electric bikes, cappuccino machines, server farms and sailboats to go to UN meetings. Major mining companies do not find new prospects. Juniors do. Then the majors buy them and develop them.That machine is broken. And no, recycling old metal does not do the job because the green economy is more metal intensive than the black economy. Also, we cannot stop the development of the poorer parts of the world to meet the richer world’s decarbonisation schedules.
    A mining finance “fix” means higher prices. New mines require a lot of workers to excavate, pour (low-carbon) cement, build roads and railways, construct beneficiation plants and refineries, and monitor waste disposal.Paul Gait and his team of metals mining analysts at Bernstein in London have come up with estimates of the copper price levels needed to finance new mines. “We believe copper needs to be priced at $8,800/tonne, or a 40 per cent uplift, to meet the government-agreed 2030 targets for decarbonisation.”If you believe the current consensus targets are not adequate, Mr Gait and his team have a more ambitious “Greta Scenario” for complete decarbonisation by 2025. That would require no less than $20,000/tonne to produce the required copper.Even keeping copper production close to today’s level will be a challenge. As Mr Gait says: “The industry faces an enormous decline rate [from existing, depleting reserves]. Mine supply has grown at 2.5 per cent and 3 per cent per annum forever. To accelerate beyond that for an industry the size of copper mining would be a hell of an undertaking.”OK, what if we fail at decarbonisation, and we are forced to turn to adaptations? Such as Europeans buying home air conditioners (a big new growth market). Those will require a lot of copper for coils, wires, power generation, etc.None of this is reflected in the (flat) forward curve for copper prices.
    On this course, decarbonisation will require not science and industry, but wizards or divine intervention.
 
watchlist Created with Sketch. Add HGO (ASX) to my watchlist
(20min delay)
Last
5.5¢
Change
0.000(0.00%)
Mkt cap ! $115.2M
Open High Low Value Volume
5.7¢ 5.7¢ 5.4¢ $281.8K 5.091M

Buyers (Bids)

No. Vol. Price($)
6 668677 5.4¢
 

Sellers (Offers)

Price($) Vol. No.
5.6¢ 7160 1
View Market Depth
Last trade - 16.10pm 09/08/2024 (20 minute delay) ?
HGO (ASX) Chart
arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch. arrow-down-2 Created with Sketch.