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Monday, August 31, 2009
Warren Buffett and Electric cars: BYD to sell electric car in US in 2010 TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, WLC.v, RM.v, LI.v, AVL.to, RES.v, BYDDY, ABN.v,
0 comments Posted by andre at 7:37 AMFT By Patti Waldmeir in Shanghai
Published: August 31 2009 12:24 Last updated: August 31 2009 12:24
BYD, the upstart Chinese car company backed by US investment guru Warren Buffett, said on Monday that it would start selling its e6 all-electric sedans in the US next year, a year ahead of schedule.
Announcing in Hong Kong that the company had nearly doubled first half net profits from a year earlier, Wang Chuanfu, BYD’s chairman, also said he was considering selling more shares to Mr Buffett.
MidAmerican Energy Holdings, a unit of Mr Buffett’s Berkshire Hathaway, bought a 10 per cent stake in BYD last September. “MidAmerican has always intended to raise its stake in BYD because it has confidence in the company’s prospects,” Mr Wang said, but added “we are still considering (whether to sell more)”.
His comments sent BYD’s shares up 8 per cent to close at HK$48.60, more than six times what MidAmerican paid for its stake nearly a year ago.
BYD is a global leader in rechargeable battery technology, but only a recent entrant to the Chinese car industry. Mr Wang, an engineer-turned-entrepeneur, plans to combine batteries with cars to spearhead a green revolution in electric vehicles, with the help of Chinese government subsidies.
BYD started selling hybrid electric vehicles to some fleet customers in China late last year but will only start limited private sales next month.
Auto analysts in China have questioned how successful such sales will be. Despite government subsidies of Rmb30,000 to Rmb50,000 for the purchase of alternative fuel vehicles, the BYD hybrid electric car will still cost nearly twice as much as the equivalent BYD conventional model.
“From a relative perspective, that’s still very expensive,” said Klaus Paur of TNS, the marketing consultancy, in Shanghai. Most Chinese customers remain dubious about electric vehicle reliability and repair costs, he said.
Mr Wang’s announcement that BYD would accelerate plans to sell its e6 all-electric model in the US may be largely “a marketing move aimed at the mainland market”, according to Mr Paur.
BYD wants to portray itself as a global player, to boost its image among mainland consumers – and perhaps to help with plans for a mainland stock market listing, possibly within the next year.
In terms of conventional car sales, BYD’s growth has been very strong: it sold its first branded car in China only in 2005. On Monday, Mr Wang said he hoped to exceed his 2009 sales target of 400,000 vehicles, as the Chinese auto market continues to steam ahead powered largely by government subsidies for the small cars that BYD sells.
With additional reporting by Shirley Chen in Shanghai"
Xstrata, Los Azules Minera Andes and TNR Gold. TNR.v, MAI.to, LUN.to, FCX, FXI, HUI, XAU
0 comments Posted by andre at 2:43 AMLabels: Argentina, Copper, Gold, Los Azules, Minera Andes, Silver, TNR Gold, Xstrata
Lithium Demand: Hyundai Mobis, LG Chem to set up battery JV TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, FMC, ROC, WLC.v, RM.v, CLQ.v, LI.v, LAT.v, AVL.to, RES.v, DAI, F, NSANY
0 comments Posted by andre at 1:16 AMHyundai Mobis has signed a memorandum of understanding with LG Chem, the country's No.1 chemicals company, for a venture which would develop and produce lithium-ion battery packs for hybrid cars, South Korea's top car-parts maker said in a filing with the Korea Exchange.
Financial details of the deal were not disclosed.
In June, LG Chem said it would invest 1 trillion won in an electric car battery plant over the next four years. It aims to derive total revenue of 2 trillion won from the battery business in 2015.
Its U.S. unit is also in a deal to supply next-generation lithium-ion batteries for General Motors' GM.UL Volt plug-in.
Hyundai Motor Co (005380.KS) launched its first hybrid car in South Korea in July, starting sales of the Elantra LPI, a hybrid model of its popular compact sedan that uses liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) and lithium-ion polymer batteries.
Hyundai is due to launch its first gasoline-electric hybrid, a version of the flagship Sonata in the latter half of 2010.
Another South Korean rechargeable battery maker, Samsung SDI Co (006400.KS), has teamed up with Germany's Robert Bosch and operates a car battery venture called SB LiMotive. SB LiMotive is set to build a plant in South Korea to start producing car batteries in 2011.
Shares in Hyundai Mobis ended down 9.86 percent at 132,500 won, far underperforming a 1.0 percent fall in the wider market , after it announced on Friday it had bought Hyundai Motor shares worth 1.34 trillion won ($1.08 billion) from Hyundai Steel (004020.KS).
LG Chem fell 1.05 percent to 188,500 won."
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Lithium and REE: Japan boosts eco-car revolution TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, WLC.v, AVL.to, RES.v, CLQ.v, LI.v, F, DAI, NSANY, TM, TTM, BYDDY, FXI,
0 comments Posted by andre at 4:41 PMBy Hiroyuki KoshojiUPI Correspondent
Published: August 27, 2009
Tokyo, Japan — Japan's major carmakers – already leaders in eco-car technology – are ready to begin mass production of electric cars that produce no emissions at all. Can these environmentally friendly vehicles edge out existing gasoline vehicles and hybrid cars in the mainstream market?
Electric vehicles have no engine, transmission or fuel tank. They are quiet, with very little vibration as they are run by electric motors instead of gasoline engines. Although EVs have been attracting attention in Japan as the ultimate eco-car because of their zero emissions, there are still challenges to be resolved before they can dream of dominating the global market.
Early this month Japan's third-largest carmaker, Nissan, introduced the world's first medium-sized and mass-produced all-electric car, the “Leaf." It will go on sale in late 2010 in Japan, the United States and Europe. Nissan expects an initial annual production of 50,000 cars, which will rise to 200,000 when the car is sold globally in 2012.
Prior to Nissan's announcement, Mitsubishi’s "i-MiEV" had captured headlines when it went on sale in July to corporate customers. It is the world's first mini-size mass-produced electric vehicle. It is now accepting orders for private customers, to be delivered after April next year.
Both EVs run 100 miles on a single battery charge. Another mini-size electric vehicle, the "Subaru Plug-in Stella," introduced in June by Fuji Heavy Industries, runs only 56 miles on a single charge.
All three EVs are powered by laminated compact lithium-ion batteries, which can be charged up to 80 percent in 15 to 30 minutes with a quick charger. Charging at home on a regular electric outlet takes from eight to 14 hours.
"Short distances like 100 miles and high-cost batteries are weak points of the current electric vehicles. Unless the performance of lithium-ion batteries is drastically improved, EVs will not replace existing gasoline vehicles," said Junji Akimoto, a group leader in manufacturing research at the National Institute of Advanced Industrial Science and Technology.
At an exhibition of Nissan’s new cars during the opening of its new global headquarters in Yokohama, Japan, company chief Carlos Ghosn said EVs could account for 10 percent of the new vehicle market by 2020. Akimoto agreed with Ghosn's view.
"There is no doubt that lithium-ion batteries are one of the strongest candidates among next-generation rechargeable batteries for electric vehicles, but further technical innovations have to be made," Akimoto said.
The high cost of such batteries is certainly a drawback. Both the i-MiEV and Plugin Stella are mini-vehicles, but in Japan they are priced at US$49,000 and $50,000 respectively, similar to luxury cars. Even with government tax incentives to promote the ownership of eco-cars and subsidies for drivers who replace older vehicles with eco-cars, they will cost about US$34,000. More than half is the battery cost.
Nissan has not revealed the price tag on its new Leaf. In order to compete with similarly equipped gasoline vehicles, it plans to lease the batteries. According to its public relations department, if the car is driven 620 miles in a month, the cost of leasing the batteries and the electricity to charge them will be one-fifth cheaper than what customers spend on gasoline for regular cars.
Although automakers emphasize the 100-mile running capacity, the actual travel distance seems to be around 60 miles if the navigation system and air conditioner are used. However, studies show that most drivers living in big cities and their satellites around the world drive less than 30 miles a day. If the prices fall to a reasonable level, these vehicles could find a place in the market.
Currently, only around 100 quick chargers have been installed at gas stations in Japan, but there is a move to strengthen the charging infrastructure among giant supermarkets and convenience store chains.
On the other hand, sales of hybrid cars, equipped with both a gasoline engine and an electric motor, are increasing due to government tax incentives and subsidies. When the world's largest automaker and hybrid innovator Toyota introduced its hybrid car, the "Prius" – which can achieve 90 miles per gallon – it got more than 200,000 orders in a month. The Prius is considered the most fuel-efficient vehicle on the market today.
Toyota plans to introduce a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle, which can be charged at home, within this year, an electric vehicle in 2012, and a hydrogen-powered fuel cell vehicle by 2015.
A pillar of the restructuring program by the struggling Big Three automakers in the United States is to shift from producing existing cars to electric or plug-in hybrid electric vehicles. General Motors is scheduled to introduce a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle, the "Chevrolet Volt," in 2010. Ford Motor Co. will introduce four kinds of EVs by 2012. Chrysler has said it aims to sell 500,000 EVs by 2013.
It is still far from clear that EVs will ever dominate the mainstream market. Experts still show an interest in fuel cell vehicles, which attracted considerable attention a few years ago before disappearing due to safety issues, costs and problems with peripheral technology.
FCVs, which emit only water, are also considered an "ultimate eco-car" by many. While some remain skeptical that these vehicles can surmount their problems, Japan's largest public research institute, the New Energy and Industrial Technology Development Organization, predicts that FCVs will begin selling in 2015, and that an explosion of demand will follow from 2020 to 2030.
"Nobody has ever seen electric vehicles that run 300 miles on a single charge, but this distance has already been accomplished by fuel cell vehicles," said Sayaka Shishido, who works in the fuel cell and hydrogen technology development department at NEDO. "The remaining problems are just costs and infrastructure."
Shishido predicted that existing gasoline vehicles will be replaced with fuel cell vehicles and that electric vehicles will secure a place as short-range vehicles in the future.
Akimoto has a negative perception of FCVs, however. "Fuel cell vehicles need to be developed dramatically. Hybrid cars will dominate the mainstream and electric vehicles will take some share in the coming decade," he said. He predicted that hybrid vehicles will account for half of total car sales in 20 years.
Masahiro Tatsumisago, a professor of applied chemistry at the Graduate School of Engineering of Osaka Prefecture University, said, "Hybrid vehicles will be more popular because the current models are very sophisticated." Tatsumisago predicts that gasoline cars will vanish and that FCVs and EVs will dominate the global market in the next three decades."
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Lithium markets: MHI to Enter Lithium-ion Secondary Battery Business TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, AVL.to, RES.v, WLC.v, CLQ.v, LI.v, RM.v, LAT.v, HUI
0 comments Posted by andre at 4:46 PM"A single idle, electric-powered car could generate as much as 10 kilowatts of power, enough to meet the average demand of 10 houses, according to Willett Kempton, director of the Center for Carbon-free Power Integration at the University of Delaware. With vehicle-to-grid technology, controlled by an array of smart meters, car owners plugged in at home or work could allow the grid to draw off unused chunks of power at times when short-term demand is high. Conversely, cars could be recharged when demand is low."
Welcome to Energy business: Charge it Low, Sell it High!"
Tokyo, August 26, 2009 - Mitsubishi Heavy Industries, Ltd. (MHI) has decided to build a commercial production verification plant in Nagasaki Prefecture and launch its operation by autumn 2010 in a move toward the company's full-scale entry into the lithium-ion secondary battery market. The new plant, to be built within the company's Nagasaki Shipyard & Machinery Works, will have a production capacity of 66 MWh (megawatt hours) of batteries a year, which is equivalent to 400,000 medium-size cells. The batteries were developed in a 20-year-long joint research and development project with Kyushu Electric Power Co., Inc.
To date MHI has supplied the batteries for sample use, but now it has opted to place them on the market. The company looks to promote lithium-ion secondary battery business through a company wide initiative and will begin by incorporating the batteries into its various products, such as forklift trucks and wind turbine power generation systems. In conjunction with this initiative, MHI will launch a new Joint Lithium Battery Operations Department effective October 1st. MHI and Kyushu Electric Power launched joint research and development into large-size batteries for electric power storage in 1988, and successfully developed compact batteries capable of supplying substantial power over long periods. Those batteries are a medium-size cell with energy capacity of 165 Wh (watt-hours), mainly used in vehicles, and a large-size stationary-use battery cell with 350 Wh. The commercial production verification plant, slated for construction start up this fall, will utilize technologies from MHI's diversified business areas, including technologies related to slurry preparation, coating, and mass-production management know how from turbocharger production. The plant will serve to verify and improve factors essential for commercial production, such as verification of operation rates, tact time, battery performance and cost target. MHI's lithium-ion secondary battery business plan calls for the construction of another full-scale commercial plant once all-out entry into the business is decided. The company will make its decision in 2011 taking the market situation, future prospects, and verification results into account. The new Joint Lithium Battery Operations Department will encompass staff members from the Power Systems Headquarters and the General Machinery & Special Vehicle Headquarters and will be charged with integrally advancing product planning and commercialization. Technical Headquarters, the Production System Innovation Planning Department and the Sustainability Energy & Environment Strategic Planning Department will also provide support. Besides producing the new batteries, MHI aims, by leveraging its abundant system development know-how, to enhance their value by incorporating them into the company's final products and systems. Specifically, for vehicle applications MHI will mount the batteries on its newly developing hybrid forklift trucks. The company also plans to provide its lithium-ion secondary batteries to affiliated companies and to supply them to other companies for installation in their products as a power train. For stationary use, MHI will incorporate the batteries as electric power storage units enabling stabilization of electricity supply from renewable energy grid systems, such as wind power and photovoltaic power generation. It also will consider, together with Kyushu Electric Power, applications in the emergency power source systems of the electricity providers, as well as an environmental-friendly independent power source at work site and a power source for micro electricity grids on remote islands. Demand for lithium-ion secondary batteries, which boast superior power storage capability, is expected to increase sharply from 2010 in tandem with further strengthening of environmental regulations. Domestic battery manufacturers will increase their production, expecting demands largely coming from applications in hybrid cars and electric vehicles initially. MHI, as a comprehensive manufacturer of energy-related machinery, looks to further contribute to the establishment of an energy-saving society by focusing on electric power storage, particularly for industrial applications, in addition to further enhancing its existing systems in areas such as high-efficiency power generation and renewable energy utilization."
Lukas Lundin found more Gold and Copper: Fortress Intercepts 26.5 Metres Grading 9.24 g/t Gold at the Elena Prospect. FST.v, CGH.to, LUN.to, HUI
0 comments Posted by andre at 11:46 AMTORONTO, ONTARIO--(Marketwire - Aug. 25, 2009) - Lundin Mining Corporation ("Lundin Mining" or the "Company") (TSX:LUN)(OMX:LUMI) today released the following statement to address allegations made by Chariot Resources in an advertisement in a leading daily newspaper:Lundin Mining wishes to make clear that it has taken no part in the dissident proxy solicitation launched by certain concerned shareholders of Chariot Resources Limited. Lundin Mining has no intention of acquiring the Mina Justa Project or in making a bid to acquire Chariot.Commenting on the allegations contained in the advertisement, Mr. Phil Wright, President and CEO said "Lundin Mining is just as concerned as any other shareholder to ensure that we realize the best possible value for our holding in Chariot." We have lost confidence in the ability of present management to accomplish this and accordingly we support the initiative of the Concerned Shareholder Group and strongly believe that a change of management and the board of directors of Chariot is necessary." We are a major shareholder and we intend to support the slate of directors proposed by the Concerned shareholders" Mr. Wright said.
Press Release
Source: Fortress Minerals Corp.
On Wednesday August 26, 2009, 11:39 am EDT
VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA--(Marketwire - Aug. 26, 2009) - Fortress Minerals Corp. ("Fortress") (TSX VENTURE:FST - News) is pleased to announce the latest results from diamond drilling at the Amy, Elena, and Tamara prospects, Svetloye Project Russia. Results include drill hole PDSC-273 from the Elena prospect that intercepted 50.5 metres (from 11.6 to 62.1 metres) grading (uncut) 5.36 grams per tonne (g/t) gold including 26.5 metres (from 32.9 to 59.4 metres) grading (uncut) 9.24 g/t gold and a cut grade of 4.50 g/t gold and 7.59 g/t gold respectively (reducing assays in excess of 30 g/t to 30 g/t). Drill results from the Amy prospect include hole PDSC-264 that intercepted 129.4 metres (from 8.0 to 137.4 metres) grading 1.04 g/t gold, and hole PDSC-262 that intercepted 75.5 metres (from 0.0 to 75.5 metres) grading 1.31 g/t gold. Of additional significance was hole PDSC-263 from the Tamara prospect that intercepted 96.6 metres (from 27.3 to 123.9 metres) grading 0.48 g/t gold.
Mr. Lukas Lundin, President and CEO of Fortress Minerals, commented, "We are very pleased to see the continued expansion of the Amy, Elena and Tamara zones. All targets remain open for further growth and we look forward to more drilling success in our ongoing program."
Labels: Copper, Gold, Lukas Lundin, Treasury Bubble, US dollar collapse
Sunridge Gold is on the move. SGC.v, NSU.to, HUI, XAU, LUN.to, CGH.to
0 comments Posted by andre at 11:22 AM Something is baking on. Is it an M&A?
"Posted by Peter Grandich at 12:49 PM on Tuesday, August 25th, 2009 Lots of inquiries about action today in Nevsun Resources. As you know this is a prime takeover candidate IMHO. The shares pulled back recently during the consolidation in gold and the umpteen no, new-news story of America’s political view on Eritrea. I had hoped this way overblown concern and gold weakness could bring Christmas early by allowing purchases at $1.40 or under U.S. We almost got our present.
Whether today’s latest rumor of takeover amounts to anything or not, I do believe barring a collapse in metal prices and/or a dramatic escalation of the friction involving Eritrea, a takeover of NSU is not if, but when. This is a superb project with a fantastic payback schedule.
If and when such a deal takes place, I suspect Eritrea can become a major area play given the tremendous exploration potential it has. Sunridge Gold (SGC-TSX.V $.40) is a natural “next-in-line” play with a strong package of projects. My belief, albeit prejudice due to the working relationship I have with SGC, is SGC becomes the next institutional/mining company darling in the area.
Stay tuned."
Labels: Africa, china, Copper, Gold, Treasury Bubble, US dollar collapse, Zinc
Lithium and REE bull market: The rush for lithium is just beginning TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, CLQ.v, WLC.v, AVL.to, RM.v, Li.v, RES.v, ABN.v, HUI
0 comments Posted by andre at 7:24 AM"Until now almost everything with Lithium on the web page was making you money and it will continue for a while, but it is time to make your homework right: we will have a roller coaster ride and you need to know what to hold, what to add on the dips and what do not even touch. If you never even called the company you are investing in, do not bother with the whole exercise - you will be burned. Hungry brokers and investors after market collapse will rush into hot very narrow money base Lithium and REE sector with micro caps and the ride could be explosive."
West will have to develop its own supply of Lithium and REE and it is already happening.
With the anticipated huge growth in hybrid electric vehicles among others demand for lithium is expected to skyrocket. Author: John ChadwickPosted: Wednesday , 26 Aug 2009
LONDON -
Dan Gleeson writes in International Mining's September Leader on the growing importance of and interest in lithium, and, by association, Bolivia. In his latest newsletter, A Buck or Two, Tjalling (TJ) de Jong also reports on the different lithium plays. TJ writes, "A small number of countries produce lithium from either brines or concentrates, Chile being the largest producer. Argentina, Chile and Australia together accounted for about 82% of the total lithium production in 2008. Supply of lithium is dominated by production of lithium from brines SQM FMC lithium and Chemetall and the sole mineral producer Talison Minerals of Australia. China has been ramping up production since 2000 but as of 2008 supplies 8% to the lithium market." In just the past week alone we have heard from five lithium explorers.
The majority of known resources are in the Bolivian Altiplano which is thought to host around 50% of global lithium resources; yet the country is unwilling to give up this land without ensuring that it profits from it. President Evo Morales has already nationalised the country's oil and natural gas sectors and is being very protective over this valuable lithium resource - see: Bolivian Govt aims to become global kingpin of lithium
The main uses for lithium have been batteries, ceramics and lubricating greases. Demand is expected to grow significantly as auto makers begin to produce hybrid electric vehicles (HEV) and electric vehicles (EV). TJ says "Lithium Ion Batteries are the preferred method for electrifying these vehicles. World production has come from 13,000 t to about 22,800 t lithium in 2008." Japan, Korea and China already have national Lithium Ion Battery technology development programs. When David Pescod of Canaccord Capital touched base with TJ, and asked for some stock picks, he said he prefers the plays that are based on brine because of their huge cost advantage.
Galaxy Resources has signed agreements for financing of its lithium project with China's Creat Group, raising at least A$26 million for the company. In addition, Creat will provide Galaxy with 100% debt finance of around A$130 million for the purpose of developing both the Mt Cattlin spodumene (lithium/tantalum) and Jiangsu lithium carbonate projects.
Managing Director, Iggy Tan said "this deal provides us with a bedrock Chinese shareholder and enables us to move ahead with the development of both the Mt Cattlin spodumene and Jiangsu lithium carbonate projects."
Galaxy has completed a definitive feasibility study that suggests Mt Cattlin (Ravensthorpe, Western Australia) is commercially viable based on a processing rate of 1 Mt/y over a 15 year mine life. The company is planning to commence the development of the mine and the construction of the mineral processing plant in Q3, 2009 with first concentrate production scheduled for Q3, 2010.
The company has also commenced a prefeasibility study into the value adding downstream production of lithium carbonate (Li2CO3). Galaxy plans to establish a 17,000 t/y lithium carbonate plant in China due to lower associated capital and operating costs, as well as being close to the strategic growing battery markets in Asia.
Linear Metals is reactivating exploration on its road accessible, 100% owned, Seymour Lake lithium/tantalum/beryllium property located to the north of Lake Nipigon, near Armstrong, in north-western Ontario, Canada. Linear says "the project is being reactivated in response to rising prices for elements such as lithium and tantalum. Brian MacEachen, President & CEO: "Historic exploration on the large Seymour Lake property has returned some very exciting lithium grades. Incredibly, lithium has never been the primary focus or target of an exploration program and as such the true potential has yet to be tested. We are taking immediate steps to initiate a drill program that will specifically target lithium mineralisation at Seymour Lake."
Lithium One has announced the first results from its Phase 2 diamond drill program at the James Bay lithium project in Quebec, Canada. Consolidated Abaddon is in the process of staking high potential lithium prospects in North America. It is also "evaluating existing lithium prospects for possible joint venture or acquisition."
Ashburton Resources has signed an agreement to acquire a 100% interest in 37 mineral claims with known occurrences of lithium bearing springs and clays in Churchill and Pershing Counties, Nevada, USA. The claim block has historically showed total lithium contents ranging from 86 to 1,480 ppm from rock and soil samples in auger holes. Ashburton says "Chemetall-Foote Corp.'s Silver Peak operation, located in Clayton Valley [320 km] south of the property, is the only lithium brine producer in North America and has been in production since 1966."
Also in Nevada is Canada's Western Lithium where its flagship Kings Valley property has a NI 43-101 resource estimate for the initial stage of development and in total hosts a historically estimated 11 million tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE). Stage 1 of what could be a huge project boasts an indicated resource of 48.1 million tonnes grading 0.27% lithium with a lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE) - 688,000 tonnes and 42.3 million tonnes grading 0.27% lithium (LCE - 606,000 tonnes) inferred. A scoping study is planned for completion during the current quarter and if all goes well the company is aiming for first production in 2013.
John Chadwick is editor/proprietor of International Mining magazine - http://www.im-mining.com/"
Tuesday, August 25, 2009
Lithium and REE: World faces hi-tech crunch as China eyes ban on rare metal exports TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, AVL.to, RES.v, WLC.v, LI.v, RM.v,
0 comments Posted by andre at 2:00 AM"Who will hold the keys to Green Mobility? Will western society with its almost forgotten memories about Freedom be able to protect one of its basic rights to move on a highway or all taxpayers bailout money will be spend on bonuses spiced by Front Running and Tipping along the way? These are the real questions. Who will finance our Junior Lithium and REE Bull to deliver Energy Security?"
Beijing is drawing up plans to prohibit or restrict exports of rare earth metals that are produced only in China and play a vital role in cutting edge technology, from hybrid cars and catalytic converters, to superconductors, and precision-guided weapons.
By Ambrose Evans-PritchardPublished: 5:58PM BST 24 Aug 2009
China mines over 95pc of the world?s rare earth minerals and is looking to hoard its resources.
A draft report by China’s Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has called for a total ban on foreign shipments of terbium, dysprosium, yttrium, thulium, and lutetium. Other metals such as neodymium, europium, cerium, and lanthanum will be restricted to a combined export quota of 35,000 tonnes a year, far below global needs.
China mines over 95pc of the world’s rare earth minerals, mostly in Inner Mongolia. The move to hoard reserves is the clearest sign to date that the global struggle for diminishing resources is shifting into a new phase. Countries may find it hard to obtain key materials at any price.
Alistair Stephens, from Australia’s rare metals group Arafura, said his contacts in China had been shown a copy of the draft -- `Rare Earths Industry Devlopment Plan 2009-2015’. Any decision will be made by China’s State Council.
“This isn’t about the China holding the world to ransom. They are saying we need these resources to develop our own economy and achieve energy efficiency, so go find your own supplies”, he said.
Mr Stephens said China had put global competitors out of business in the early 1990s by flooding the market, leading to the closure of the biggest US rare earth mine at Mountain Pass in California - now being revived by Molycorp Minerals.
New technologies have since increased the value and strategic importance of these metals, but it will take years for fresh supply to come on stream from deposits in Australia, North America, and South Africa. The rare earth family are hard to find, and harder to extract.
Mr Stephens said Arafura’s project in Western Australia produces terbium, which sells for $800,000 a tonne. It is a key ingredient in low-energy light-bulbs. China needs all the terbium it produces as the country switches wholesale from tungsten bulbs to the latest low-wattage bulbs that cut power costs by 40pc.
No replacement has been found for neodymium that enhances the power of magnets at high heat and is crucial for hard-disk drives, wind turbines, and the electric motors of hybrid cars. Each Toyota Prius uses 25 pounds of rare earth elements. Cerium and lanthanum are used in catalytic converters for diesel engines. Europium is used in lasers.
Blackberries, iPods, mobile phones, plams TVs, navigation systems, and air defence missiles all use a sprinkling of rare earth metals. They are used to filter viruses and bacteria from water, and cleaning up Sarin gas and VX nerve agents.
Arafura, Mountain Pass, and Lynas Corp in Australia, will be able to produce some 50,000 tonnes of rare earth metals by the mid-decade but that is not enough to meet surging world demand.
New uses are emerging all the time, and some promise quantum leaps in efficiency. The Tokyo Institute of Technology has made a breakthrough in superconductivity using rare earth metals that lower the friction on power lines and could slash electricity leakage.
The Japanese government has drawn up a “Strategy for Ensuring Stable Supplies of Rare Metals”. It calls for `stockpiling’ and plans for “securing overseas resources’. The West has yet to stir."
Monday, August 24, 2009
Future of Lithium: Who would like to build Green Future in Bolivia? TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, WLC.v, RM.v, CLQ.v, LI.v, RES.v, AVL.to
0 comments Posted by andre at 4:39 PMSunday, August 23, 2009
Investing in Lithium: Handbook of Lithium...Deposits, Processing, Uses and Properties. TNR.v, CZX.v, SQM, ROC, FMC, WLC.v, RM.v, CLQ.v, AVL.to, RES.v
0 comments Posted by andre at 5:14 AMIt looks like we do not have to preach about our Lithium and REE bull market any more and CNBC and BNN is taking the lead with THE Wall Street Journal. Apart from our English specially spiced with patented new grammar inventions and misspellings we have to give something more to stay at the edge of the green mobility revolution. As we all know Electricity comes from the electric socket on the wall, but where from Lithium and REE comes apart from broadcasting fever and websites full of this stuff?
Why some companies involved are proclaiming that it will be important to have a "strategic balance of both pegmatite and brine projects - pegmatites with the advantage of presence rare metals such as tantalum and niobium, while brines offer the low-cost large scale production of lithium carbonate that will be increasingly important"?
Saturday, August 22, 2009
Buffett charged by Lithium: China's BYD to mass produce batteries for its electric cars TNR.v, CZX.v, BYDDY, SQM, ROC, FMC, WLC.v, RM.v, CLQ.v, AVL.to
0 comments Posted by andre at 3:51 PMNext Big Thing - industrial revolution based on green mobility, brings potentially explosive move in Lithium and REE products pricing. Cost of Lithium in the battery is 3-5% and price could move substantially before affecting supply. Welcome to the Gold market back ten-fifteen years ago - with recent Gold price close to 1000 USD/oz Majors are mining deposits considered to be a dust with Gold price at below 300 USD/oz. Lithium price has moved already from 2000 level of 2000 USD/t of Lithium carbonate to over 6000 USD/t now with electric car fever just starting to get into mass media and economies still recovering from near death experience.
[Date:08-22-2009]
Source: Xinhua
Chinese battery and electric automaker BYD Co. has set up a plant to mass produce lithium batteries for its electric cars in Huizhou, south China's Guangdong Province, according to the China Securities Journal. BYD, partly owned by Warren Buffet, has injected around five billion yuan (about 731.5 million U.S. dollars) into the operation of the Huizhou plant, which produces rechargeable batteries, automobile parts and handset components, the newspaper said Thursday. Facilities for the production of batteries for the company's electric cars are almost ready now, since construction began in September last year, the newspaper said. The Shenzhen-based company's F3DM, China's first plug-in hybrid, made its debut last December. Huizhou plant, the first eligible for mass production of lithium-ion batteries that are core technologies of BYD's electric cars, is seen as a key step in the company's electric car manufacturing. The Wall Street Journal said Saturday that the company is aiming to sell its all-electric battery car in the U.S. next year, ahead of the original schedule, citing company Chairman"
BY NORIHIKO SHIROUZU
XIAN, China -- BYD Co., the Chinese auto maker part-owned by Warren Buffett's company, is finalizing plans for an all-electric battery car that would be sold in the U.S. next year, ahead of the original schedule, Chairman Wang Chuanfu said.
In an interview at a BYD factory here, Mr. Wang said the company aims to use money from a planned new-share sale in China to help pay for the U.S. push, as well as for a second production line for automotive lithium-ion batteries near BYD's Shenzhen headquarters.
He said BYD wants to build up its brand name in the U.S. ..."
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0 comments Posted by andre at 5:25 AMBy TOMOKO A. HOSAKA (AP) – 3 hours ago
TOKYO — Honda Motor Co. plans to introduce electric vehicles in the U.S. early next decade, joining a growing number of automakers vying for the lead in clean technology development, local media reported Saturday.
Japan's second-biggest car maker, which has focused on gas-electric hybrids so far, is building an all-electric prototype to be unveiled at the Tokyo Motor Show in October, according to the Nikkei financial newspaper. It said Honda would begin sales of electric vehicles in the United States in the first half of the decade.
A Honda spokesman said the Tokyo-based company has begun to develop electric vehicles, but has not decided on a release date. He declined to be named, citing company policy.
Honda released its new Insight earlier this year, billing it as the cheapest gas-electric hybrid on the market, to compete with Toyota Motor Corp.'s top-selling Prius.
But with U.S. environmental regulations expected to toughen, automakers are stepping up efforts to release zero-emission cars.
Honda has leased a small number of its FCX Clarity hydrogen fuel cell vehicles to customers in Southern California since last year. Their high development cost, however, prompted Honda to consider adding electric cars to its lineup, the Nikkei said.
Among its rivals, Nissan Motor Co. is set to begin selling its Leaf electric hatchback in the U.S., Europe and Japan next year. Toyota Motor Corp. has said it plans to launch electric models by 2012.
In June, Mitsubishi Motors Corp., launched its own electric vehicle, the 4.59 million yen ($48,300) i-MiEV. Ford's first battery electric vehicle, the Transit Connect commercial van, is to be available next year, while General Motors Corp. is set to release its Chevrolet Volt next year, a rechargeable electric car with a small internal combustion engine that the company says will get up to 230 miles per gallon (98 kilometers per liter) in city driving.
The Obama administration in June said Ford, Nissan and Tesla Motors Inc. would be the first three beneficiaries of a $25 billion fund to develop fuel-efficient vehicles."