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We’re not even close to running out of green minerals

Far from being a prophecy of doom, predictions of catastrophic shortfalls forced the market to behave exactly as it should

    • Prices for lithium-ion batteries rose last year for the first time since at least 2010 as materials pushed up the price.
    • Prices for lithium-ion batteries rose last year for the first time since at least 2010 as materials pushed up the price. Pixabay
    Published Tue, Feb 7, 2023 · 05:57 PM

    FOR those betting against the world’s ability to kick its carbon addiction, the commodities boom of the past few years has provided fresh ammunition.

    Tesla Inc’s Model 3 contained 4.5 kilograms of cobalt in its power pack in 2018, materials analyst Benchmark Minerals Intelligence estimated at the time. Scale that up to the 7.8 million electric vehicles sold last year — 10 per cent of the global market — and then project forward into a future where that share rises toward 100 per cent, and you can quickly see the world running into a supply problem.

    Sure enough, prices for lithium-ion batteries rose last year for the first time since at least 2010 as materials pushed up the price, according to BloombergNEF. You would hardly be surprised if things got worse as green investments in the US, European Union and China ramp up over the coming years.

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