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Sibanye asks for EU concessions as it ramps up Europe’s first lithium mine

Sibanye eu lithium mine
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Sibanye asks for EU concessions as it ramps up Europe’s first lithium mine

  • Plans to commission Finland refinery hinge on EU support
  • Sibanye launched Europe’s first lithium mine in February
  • Lithium concentrate production expected in September quarter
  • Decision on refinery expected by ​the end of 2026

HARARE, April 20 (Reuters) – South Africa’s Sibanye Stillwater said ‌on Monday it is seeking concessions from the European Union to shield Europe’s first large-scale lithium mining and processing venture from price volatility and unfair competition.

Diversified miner Sibanye (SSWJ.J), is advancing its ​Keliber lithium project in Finland in phases as it seeks to manage risk ​in a volatile pricing environment for the battery metal.

It began mining ⁠lithium ore at the Syväjärvi open-cast mine in February and plans to commission ​a concentrator during the third quarter of 2026, producing spodumene concentrate at a rate ​of about 140,000 metric tons annually.

A decision on commissioning a refinery to produce about 15,000 metric tons of battery-grade lithium hydroxide per year will be taken in the third quarter and largely ​depends on ongoing talks with the EU, including on a floor price, Mika ​Seitovirta, Sibanye’s chief European adviser, told analysts.

The EU enacted the Critical Raw Materials Act in 2024, ‌striving ⁠to reduce dependence on Chinese-dominated strategic metal supplies, amid a shift towards cleaner energy.

The EU regulations seek to boost critical metal production within the bloc through accelerated permitting, as well as access to public grants and private financing.

Seitovirta said during Sibanye’s international capital markets presentation,

Could we have some ​price protection mechanism for ​unfair competition, for ⁠instance? That is, of course, something that we need to have,

“We need ​more when it comes to investment risks and also, when ​it comes ⁠to trade measures,” he added, citing U.S. tariffs and China’s metal export restrictions.

CEO Richard Stewart said Sibanye wanted assurances that its refinery operations would be protected from factors including ⁠oversupply ​from China.

He said,

If there are games that get played in ​the market, help us protect what is a very strategic asset and not ask our shareholders to ​carry all of that risk,

Reporting by Nelson Banya; Editing by Alexander Smith

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