Demand for graphite is projected to increase
500 per cent over the next 10 years because of the expected exponential growth
in the electric vehicle market, says Battery Minerals boss David Flanagan.
Speaking at the annual Diggers and Dealers
Mining Forum in Kalgoorlie today, the former managing director of Atlas Iron
says his company’s Montepuez graphite project in Mozambique was poised to be
part of the global supply solution. Graphite is a key ingredient in the anodes of
lithium-ion batteries that power electric vehicles.Montepuez hosts an indicated
and inferred resource of 105.9mt at 7.74 per cent graphite at a 2.5 per cent
cut-off.Battery Minerals hopes to begin construction of its $US57 million to
$US67 million project in the first half of next year, with first exports from
the first quarter of 2019.
Mr Flanagan said he had chosen to hold off
signing offtake agreements as part of a funding solution to the
20,000-30,000tpa project.“The further out from a project you are, the bigger
the discount you have to accept when signing offtake agreements,” he said.Mr Flanagan said the company was entirely
comfortable with Mozambique as a mining jurisdiction.“There’s been no change in
mining policy in Mozambique for 25 years,” he said.“BHP is there, Rio is there,
we already have environmental approvals and port allocation.”The company was
also investigating a downstream processing arm to add value to its product.Shares
in Battery Minerals were steady at 6.9¢ at the close.
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