Cobalt, a crucial battery material, is suddenly superabundant
How an obstacle to the energy transition disappeared
Just a year ago a global crunch in one metal looked likely to single-handedly derail the energy transition. Not only was cobalt, a crucial battery material, being dug up far too slowly to meet soaring demand, but the lion’s share of known reserves sat in Congo, a country rife with instability, corruption and child labour. Fast forward to today and the price of the blue metal, which had more than doubled between summer 2021 and spring 2022, to $82,000 a tonne, has collapsed to $35,000, not far from historic lows.
This article appeared in the Finance & economics section of the print edition under the headline “Bolt from the blue”
Finance & economics February 18th 2023
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