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Creamer Media's Mining Weekly
MiningWeekly.com Audio Articles
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  • MiningWeekly.com Audio Articles

    Martin Creamer talks about: SA's platinum assets, hydrogen fuel cell tech, green molecules

    2026/06/26 | 10 mins.
    Mining Weekly Editor Martin Creamer notes that Sibanye-Stillwater’s CEO has declares the company’s South African platinum assets the ‘world’s best’; he discusses Deputy President Paul Mashatile's recent working trip to China over hydrogen energy and fuel cell technologies; and th
  • MiningWeekly.com Audio Articles

    IMF says it will take time for energy, commodity prices to normalize after US-Iran deal

    2026/06/26 | 2 mins.
    This audio is brought to you by Endress and Hauser, a global leader in process and laboratory measurement technology, offering a broad portfolio of instruments, solutions and services for industrial process measurement and automation.

    The International Monetary Fund (IMF) said on Thursday it has seen energy and commodity prices fall since the US-Iran agreement to halt hostilities and reopen the Strait of Hormuz, but it will take time for prices and Gulf trade flows to normalize.

    IMF spokesperson Julie Kozack told a news briefing that in the next update of its World Economic Outlook on July 8, the Fund will decide whether to continue with the three growth scenarios it presented in April that depended on Iran war outcomes.

    As the Strait of Hormuz remained closed in May, keeping benchmark oil prices above $100 a barrel, Kozack had said the global economy was moving from the more benign "reference forecast," which had assumed a quick end to the conflict, to an "adverse scenario" with 2.5% global growth for 2026.

    The adverse scenario assumed a full-year 2026 average oil price of $100 a barrel, but also a tightening of financial conditions and rising inflation expectations.

    Kozack said on Thursday that inflationary expectations have been well anchored, as some central banks have moved to raise interest rates, and financial conditions have remained accommodative, with both advanced and emerging market countries able to access international financing markets.

    Benchmark Brent crude oil futures for August delivery traded around $73 a barrel on Thursday, their lowest level since before the February 28 start of the US-backed war with Iran.

    Kozack also said prices for urea, other fertilizers and base metals had fallen with the resumption of shipments from Gulf countries, but it will take time for full normalization of prices and trade because of shipping lead times to final destinations.

    "So this means that there will be some time before we ... go back to a normal state, and of course that all assumes that the ceasefire remains in place," Kozack said.

    She added the IMF is most concerned about the conflict's impact on developing countries that are net energy importers with few fiscal reserves or stockpiles of oil and other commodities, especially in Africa.

    Asked about the war's impact on India, Kozack said India's domestic demand remained strong, with real GDP growth projected at 6.5% for the 2026/27 fiscal year.
  • MiningWeekly.com Audio Articles

    $870m ilmenite beneficiation project enters construction phase at Richards Bay IDZ

    2026/06/26 | 4 mins.
    This audio is brought to you by Endress and Hauser, a global leader in process and laboratory measurement technology, offering a broad portfolio of instruments, solutions and services for industrial process measurement and automation.

    The construction of the first phase of the Nyanza Light Metals plant to advance ilmenite up the value curve in the form of titanium dioxide (TiO2) pigment has begun at the Richards Bay Industrial Development Zone (RBIDZ) in South Africa's KwaZulu-Natal province.

    Nyanza CEO Donovan Chimhandamba confirmed this to Mining Weekly on Thursday, June 25 at the Coatings for Africa show in the Sandton Convention Centre, where Nyanza is exhibiting. (Also watch attached Creamer Media video interview.)

    Foundation piling works are in progress and the targeted date for the start of TiO2 production is the end of 2029.

    The plant will process ilmenite produced from the mining of heavy mineral sands to produce the many-times-higher-priced TiO2 pigment for industrial coatings, architectural paints, paper and plastics.

    A multi-phase industrial platform linking titanium beneficiation with downstream battery materials production is part of the overall design.

    Nyanza has an engineering, procurement, construction and operations management contract with East China Engineering Science and Technology Company, a subsidiary of China National Chemical Engineering Group Company.

    Firm offtake agreements are already in place.

    The $870-million first phase TiO₂ project is being financed by Afreximbank and African Finance Corporation (AFC), together with pan-African and local development finance institutions.

    An estimated 3 000 people are expected to be employed at the peak of Phase 1 construction and 850 permanent jobs created. The second phase is expected to generate 2 000 construction jobs and 600 permanent jobs.

    A Phase 2 battery materials and advanced chemical project is planned as part of a $750-million downstream expansion.

    Fully integrated with Phase 1, the second phase project will make use of process by-products. Planned is the production of lithium iron phosphate, zirconium oxychloride, and fumed silica. It is being designed as a closed-loop, high-value industrial materials platform.

    The Phase 2 project has entered bankable feasibility study phase, which is expected to be completed in 2028 and advanced with the same engineering, procurement and construction contractor.

    Project development and financing leadership will be by Afreximbank and AFC acting as co-mandated lead arrangers.

    The project will be co-developed by Afreximbank, AFC and South Africa's State-owned Industrial Development Corporation, with support from the Department of Trade, Industry and Competition and the RBIDZ.

    The overall strategic positioning of the initiative is designed to advance titanium beneficiation and value addition, downstream expansion into battery materials, export diversification and industrial deepening.

    Its integration of mineral beneficiation with battery materials production is described by Nyanza as positioning South Africa within global energy transition, AI compute and advanced manufacturing value chains.

    The vision is to link titanium resources to downstream applications in energy storage, electric mobility, advanced materials, AI and computing supply chains.
  • MiningWeekly.com Audio Articles

    Lithium producers bet on battery storage as demand shifts beyond EVs

    2026/06/25 | 3 mins.
    This audio is brought to you by Endress and Hauser, a global leader in process and laboratory measurement technology, offering a broad portfolio of instruments, solutions and services for industrial process measurement and automation.

    The lithium industry is growing more optimistic about a market recovery as booming demand for battery storage systems helps offset a slowdown in some electric vehicle (EV) markets, leading producers told an industry conference this week.

    While EVs have been the main driver of lithium demand for years, regulatory changes in the US and elsewhere have cooled sales in some key markets. That slowdown coincided with industry overproduction, pushing lithium prices sharply lower.

    But growing demand for stationary battery storage systems, driven by the expansion of artificial intelligence and efforts to strengthen power grids, is helping reshape the market outlook.

    "The period of market overcorrection is over," said Raju Daswani, CEO of consultancy Fastmarkets. "Energy storage has become a primary driver of growth in this market."

    Fastmarkets estimates that lithium demand for battery storage systems is growing at 40% per year, he said.

    "This is a fundamental change and it adds a robust foundation if you compare it to a far-more volatile consumer-driven electric vehicle demand picture," Daswani told the Fastmarkets Global Lithium, Battery and Critical Materials Conference in Las Vegas.

    Attendance at the conference, considered the world's largest annual gathering of lithium investors, executives and consumers, rose 10% this year to roughly 1 100, organizers said.

    The mood was a marked shift from the dour one that pervaded the 2025 conference. Lithium prices since then have more than tripled.

    "Lithium demand in the next two years is going to be much more balanced between EVs and energy storage," said Jérôme Pécresse, head of Rio Tinto's aluminum and lithium business unit, which aims to boost lithium production capacity by 2028.

    Albemarle, the world's largest lithium producer, noted it is seeing steady growth for battery storage, in contrast to lumpy EV demand.

    "Grid storage is much more evenly distributed around the world," Eric Norris, the company's chief commercial officer, told Reuters on the conference sidelines. "It's an interesting demand driver."

    In a further sign of market demand, ioneer said on Monday it had signed a letter of intent with Hyundai Engineering and an arm of the South Korean government to support its Nevada lithium project.

    GOVERNMENT PRICE SUPPORT STILL SOUGHT

    Despite the improving market, executives urged governments to do more to financially underpin lithium processing, a segment dominated by low-cost Chinese companies. G7 leaders last week, for instance, agreed to better coordinate efforts on boosting Western lithium and nickel markets.

    "What are governments willing to pay for security of supply? There's a tax to be paid for that, and it hasn't been paid yet," said Dale Henderson, CEO of PLS, Australia's largest independent lithium producer.

    Audrey Robertson, the US assistant energy secretary, encouraged the industry to focus on technological innovations that could change how the markets for lithium and other critical minerals function.

    "The way that we're processing lithium today is not the way we're going to process it in five years," Robertson told Reuters on the conference sidelines.
  • MiningWeekly.com Audio Articles

    IN FOCUS: Portfolio Diversification – Why Copper, Why Now?

    2026/06/25 | 17 mins.
    Mining companies are increasingly reshaping their portfolios around copper as investors place a premium on exposure to the metal, driving a wave of acquisitions, asset reviews and strategic repositioning across the sector.

    This is according to BMO Capital Markets managing direct
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