Metal Bulletin - May 18, 2021

The United States plans to 'make up for lost time' in the battle against climate change by developing new technologies and investing in the ...

in the cobalt sulfate market was poor. Fastmarkets' price assessment for nickel sulfate min 21%, max 22.5%, cobalt 10ppm max, exw China

The United States plans to 'make up for lost time' in the battle against climate change by developing new technologies and investing in the products that will drive the transition to a global, low-carbon economy, according to the country's Treasury chief, Janet Yellen…Speaking in a keynote speech at the US Chamber's inaugural global forum on economic recovery, the Secretary to the Treasury said that in recent years the federal government had largely ignored the problem of climate change while ceding economic leadership to other countries…'We know that climate change poses an existential threat, but we also know it presents a historic, economic opportunity for those companies, industries and countries [that] seize the mantle of leadership and drive the transition to a global, low-carbon economy,' she said on Tuesday May 18…'For example, solar and wind are already the fastest-growing segments of the global energy market, but China has taken the lead in both and is racing ahead in developing battery storage technologies as well. Our disadvantage deepened over the past four years with our exit from the Paris Agreement, the removal of dozens of important environmental protections and our under-investment in technologies of the future,' she told the forum…'We're now less prepared than we ought to be for the increasingly frequent and deadly impact of weather-related events, and less equipped to lead the [transformation of the] global economy [that is already] under way. This administration is acting, and will make up for lost time,' she added…Yellen's comments come as the US debates a proposed American Jobs Plan, which aims to invest about one percentage point of the country's gross domestic product (GDP) per year over eight years to upgrade the nation's infrastructure, revitalize manufacturing, invest in research & science and shore up supply chains…Many of the materials critical to the technologies that go into wind turbines, solar panels, electric vehicles, and energy-efficient lighting face supply challenges, however…Solar energy requires various key raw materials, including indium, selenium, tellurium, and gallium for cells, as well as copper for wiring and thin film cells. Wind turbines, meanwhile, require aluminium, particularly in the nacelle housing the machinery that transfers wind power into electricity. And the magnets used in wind turbines require rare earths, which allow for smaller, lighter generators….Batteries in electric vehicles as well as for use in energy storage meanwhile require raw materials such as lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite and manganese.

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Fortune Minerals Limited published this content on 19 May 2021 and is solely responsible for the information contained therein. Distributed by Public, unedited and unaltered, on 19 May 2021 18:39:01 UTC.