South Korea's SK Innovation signs Glencore cobalt supply deal

Reuters

Published Dec 04, 2019 04:16AM ET

South Korea's SK Innovation signs Glencore cobalt supply deal

LONDON (Reuters) - South Korean battery maker SK Innovation has signed a six-year deal to buy up to 30,000 tonnes of cobalt from miner Glencore (LON:GLEN), allowing it produce batteries for 3 million electric vehicles.

Hit by oversupply, cobalt prices have shrunk from $95,000 per tonne in May 2018 to around $35,000 now. The slump has weighed on Glencore's share price and prompted the company to reduce output of the battery metal.

Analysts predict, however, demand will recover as the take-up in electric vehicles gathers speed. SK Innovation has been competing for a share of the battery market, beating its larger rival LG Chem to a deal to supply auto maker Volkswagen (DE:VOWG_p).

SK Innovation said in a statement on Wednesday it assumed global cobalt demand for electric vehicle batteries would be 32,000 tonnes in 2020 and 92,000 tonnes in 2025.

Glencore and China dominate global production of cobalt, which is concentrated in Democratic Republic of Congo, prompting concerns about conflict and artisanal labor.

Glencore and SK Innovation said they were committed to ensuring ethical and responsible production and the companies agreed the Congolese operations would be independently audited each year against a due diligence standard defined by the Responsible Mining Initiative.

Investor sentiment around Glencore has been depressed this year, leading to a 19% fall in its stock.