Page 174 - CW E-Magazine (3-9-2024)
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Special Report



               Copper (Mt)    Lithium (Mt Li)  Nickel (Mt)    Cobalt (kt)  Graphite (Mt)  Rare earths (kt)                                                            ®
           25              0.5            6.0            300             5             75


           20              0.4            4.8            240             4             60

           15              0.3            3.6            180             3             45
                                                                                                                         Achieve flawless quality control
           10              0.2            2.4            120             2             30
                                                ​               ​             ​
                 ​               ​                                                           ​
            5              0.1            1.2             60             1             15                                with Azentio ONEERP



                               N-1 material requirements  N-1 supply  35% of requirements

                            Fig. 4: N-1 material requirements and N-1 refi ned material supply in 2030 in APS.
       Source: IEA
       consumers and for affordability, bringing  carbon intensity, relying mostly on coal-  nario, saving an amount roughly equiva-
       clean technology costs back on a down-  based electricity.         lent to today’s production. Recycling rates    In industries where precision, traceability, and
       ward trajectory, including the 14% reduc-                          for many materials have exhibited limited
       tion in battery prices in 2023. However,  Some $800-bn of investment in mining   growth in the past. In the NZE Scenario,   quality control are paramount, implementing an
       falling  prices  also  make  spending  to  is required to get on track for a 1.5°C   however, this needs to change, with grow-
       ensure reliable and diversifi ed supply less  scenario to 2040      ing policy attention to stepping up rates      advanced batch tracking system is essential.
       appealing to investors.  This price effect   In the  APS, approximately $590-bn  of collection and reprocessing. Recycled
       has had the biggest consequences in new  is  required  over the same  period. These  quantities of copper and cobalt could   Azentio ONEERP provides comprehensive tools
       and emerging resource holders; in the  increases need to be made in a way that  reduce 2040 primary supply requirements
       case of nickel, three-quarters of operating  fosters a more diversifi ed array of supply  by 30%, and 15% for lithium and nickel.   and functionalities to enhance batch traceability,
       or potential projects that are at risk are  sources in the future. Financing diversifi ed  Without the uptake of recycling and
       outside the top three producers.  critical mineral supply chains faces  reuse, mining capital requirements would   ensuring that products meet the highest
                                         numerous challenges, such as cost infl ation,  need to be one-third higher.
       Our  fi rst-of-its-kind  risk  assessment  long-term price uncertainty and limited                                 standards.
       reveals potential areas of weakness for  value  placed  on  diversifi cation  by  con-  New supplies must not come at the cost
       each mineral in supporting energy tran-  sumers. This requires specifi c policy mea-  of local communities or the environment
       sition goals                      sures to reinforce the investment case for   Our systematic ESG performance
          The Outlook includes a new risk  supply  chain  diversifi cation.  Enhancing  tracking paints a mixed picture.  The   Scan the QR code and book your demo today!
       assessment framework for key energy tran-  market transparency can also help, from  industry is making progress on worker
       sition minerals, across four major dimen-  pricing – with benefi ts to be drawn from  safety, gender balance, community invest-
       sions – supply risks, geopolitical risks,  effi cient price discovery mechanisms and  ment and renewable energy uses, but the
       barriers to respond to supply disruptions,  fi nancial tools to hedge risks – to infor-  same cannot be said for waste generation,
       and exposure to environmental, social  mation, with a strong need for increasing  emissions and water consumption and
       and governance (ESG) and climate risks.  the availability of reliable data on con-  discharge, suggesting ample scope for
       Overall, lithium and graphite show the  sumption, supply and trade.  improvement. The benefi ts associated with
       highest risk scores. Lithium and copper                            mineral production, such as revenue and                                                              ®
       are more exposed to supply and volume  Stepping up efforts to recycle, innovate   jobs, have to be felt by producer countries
       risks whereas graphite, cobalt, rare earths  and encourage behavioural change is   and communities. Voluntary sustainability            ONEERP
       and nickel face more substantial geo-  vital to ease potential strains on supply  standards can help actors improve ESG
       political risks. Most minerals are exposed   In the case of lithium, the combination  performance, but greater transparency,            contactus@azentio.com | azentio.com
       to high environmental risks. For example,  of right sizing EV batteries, alternative  due diligence, harmonised approaches to
       today’s  refi ning  operations  occur  in  chemistries and recycling could reduce  credibility and appropriate incentives are
       places where grids tend to have a higher  demand by 25% in 2030 in the NZE Sce-  needed to tap their full potential.


       174                                                                 Chemical Weekly  September 3, 2024


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