Sorry for posting this in chart thread....
5000T a year would make you one of the biggest cobalt miners in the world as of 2016
Here are the TOP 5
1. Glencore (LSE:GLEN)
Total production: 27,400 tonnes
Glencore is the world’s largest cobalt-mining company by a long shot, achieving total production of
27,400 tonnes in 2017.
According to the Financial Times, the company is aiming to increase its cobalt output to 63,000 tonnes by 2020.
To do so, Glencore has been taking steps to increase its presence in the cobalt space. It
upped its involvement in the cobalt and copper markets last year, paying Fleurette Group $960 million to increase its stakes in Mutanda Mining and Katanga Mining (TSX:
KAT), both located in the DRC.
2. China Molybdenum (HKEX:3993)
Total production: 9,314 tonnes
China Molybdenum, which is partially owned by the Chinese government, produced a total of 9,314 tonnes of cobalt in 2016. The company’s 2017 figures have not been released at this time.
In 2017, the cobalt-mining company
paid Freeport Cobalt $2.65 billion for its 70-percent stake in TF Holdings, which indirectly owns 80 percent of the Tenke Fungurume mine in the DRC. The mine has one of the world’s
largest concentrations of cobalt and offers “security of supply of a critical battery material for decades to come.” Traders say most of Tenke Fungurume’s output is consumed by China.
3. Fleurette Group
Total production: 7,595 tonnes
Fleurette is the world’s third-largest cobalt-mining company, putting out a total of 7,595 tonnes in 2016. Numbers for 2017 are not yet available.
Until last year, the company held stakes in Mutanda Mining and Katanga Mining, both of which are cobalt-producing operations in the DRC. However, as mentioned, it has now sold its interests in both properties to Glencore.
4. Vale (NYSE:VALE)
Total production: 5,278 tonnes
Vale produced 5,278 tonnes of cobalt in 2016; its 2017 numbers are not out yet. The cobalt-mining company reported
net operating revenues of $29.363 billion that year, 14.7 percent higher than in 2015.
In Canada,
Vale is active in Ontario’s Sudbury Basin; together, six underground mines produce mainly
nickel, but also copper, cobalt, PGMs,
gold and
silver. The company’s Thompson Complex, located in Manitoba, also produces cobalt, although nickel is the primary metal mined.
Additionally, Vale operates the
Goro open-pit mine in New Caledonia, where it produces cobalt as a by-product of nickel. The company has been trying to sell a
20- to 40-percent stake in the asset, but so far there have been no high bidders. The mine has been plagued with “technical setbacks, a chemical spill and violent protests by locals”
as per Reuters.
5. Gecamines
Total production: 4,167 tonnes
Gecamines, a state-controlled cobalt-mining company in the DRC, produced 4,167 tonnes of cobalt in 2016. Its 2017 numbers have yet to be released.
The company has
minority interests in a number of major DRC mines, with companies such as Glencore, US-based Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE:
FCX) and Canada’s Ivanhoe Mines (TSX:
IVN) having controlling stakes and operating the projects.
In November 2017,
Bloomberg covered a report that claims nearly $750 million is missing from Gecamines’ accounts. The funds were paid by its international partners, but they don’t appear in the company’s books. The cobalt-mining company has faced criticism in recent years from the International Monetary Fund and advocacy groups for
selling assets in non-transparent procedures.
Late last year, Gecamines also found itself in the midst of two court battles. Back in March of that year, the company
was found to have “blocked its 16-year partner GTL’s access” to a key mine in the DRC in order to “make way for a new investor.” The failed partner swap resulted in two disgruntled parties, GTL and Shamrock Global. Investors will have to wait and see how these cases conclude.