The Klondike
Gold Rush of the 1800s has given way to the Canada Graphite Hustle of the 21st
Century. In what may seem to many an
interminable series on graphite resources developers we have made note of over
a half dozen companies in Canada attempting to bring new supplies of graphite
ore out of the earth. The action is not
limited to Canada. There are at least a dozen
other aspirants with plots in Canada and the rest of North America as well as
in Australia and Africa.
Piecing together
disclosures by the North America group alone there is at least 250 million
metric tons of inferred resources under development. Planned graphite production in North America
is estimated at as much as 214,000 metric tons per year - all
of it natural flake graphite - that could come online over the next few
years. Is the additional capacity needed?
North
America Graphite Resource Developers
|
Location
|
Alabama Graphite
Corp. (ALP: V or ABGPF:
OTC/QB)
|
Alabama
|
Canada Carbon,
Inc. (CCB: V or BRUZF:
OTC/QB)
|
Quebec
|
Canada Strategic
Metals, Inc. (CJC: V or CJCFF:
OTC/QB)
|
Quebec
|
Focus Graphite,
Inc. (FMS: TSX-V or FSCMF: OTC/QB)
|
Quebec
|
Graphite One
Resources, Inc. (GPH: V or GPHOF:
OTC/QB)
|
Alaska
|
Great Lakes
Graphite (GLK: V or GLKIF:
OTC/QB)
|
Ontario
|
Lomiko Metals,
Inc. (LMR: V)
|
Quebec
|
Mason Graphite,
Inc. (LLG: V or MGPHF: OTC/QB)
|
Quebec
|
Northern
Graphite, Inc. (NGC.V or NGPHF: OTC/QB)
|
Ontario
|
Nouveau
Monde Mining Enterprise (NOU: V or NMGRF:
OTC)
|
Quebec
|
Ontario
Graphite (private)
|
Ontario
|
Zenyatta
Ventures Ltd. (ZEN: V or ZENYF:
OTC/QB)
|
Ontario
|
According to the
U.S. Geological Survey in 2014, natural flake graphite production was
approximately 1.2 million metric tons.
Approximately 67% originated from producers in China with the balance
coming from a mix of resource companies in India, Brazil, Canada, North Korea
and Sri Lanka. Planned North
American production would increase total production by 18%, bringing total
annual production to 1.4 million metric tons.
More importantly, the successful start-up of all the currently planned
production in North America would propel the region into the number two spot among leading producing regions.
As noted in the
first article in this series, the widespread adoption of electric vehicles for
both commercial and personal use is driving demand for lithium ion batteries
that need graphite for make the anode component.
According, to Avicenne Energy, a consulting firm
focused on supply chain economics, the battery sector -
transportation as well as storage batteries - is
expected to require as much as 290,000 metric tons of flake graphite by the
year 2025. This compares 118,000 metric
tons of graphite used in 2014 for batteries.
It may appear to
be a significant increase in production capacity, but given the additional
graphite supply needed to satisfy hungry battery manufacturers, the planned
North American production may be needed.
However, when the other resource developers around the world are considered the
math could be different. Unfortunately,
the data points are not as reliable for resources developers with patches in
Australia, South America and Africa. For
five that have revealed details, estimated indicated resources and planned
annual production are 138.9 million metric tons and 162,000 metric tons per
year, respectively.
Rest
of World Graphite Resource Developers
|
Location
|
Bora Bora
Resources, Ltd. (BBR: ASX)
|
Sri Lanka
|
CKR Carbon (CKR:
TSX.V)
|
Namibia
|
Elcora Advanced
Materials (ERA: TSX.V or ECORF: OTC/QB)
|
Namibia
|
Energizer
Resources Ltd. (EGZ: TSX.V or ENZR: OTC/QX)
|
Madagascar
|
Graphex Mining
Ltd. (GPX: ASX)
|
Tanzania
|
Extrativa Metal
Quimica (private)
|
Brazil
|
Hexagon
Resources, Ltd. (HXG: ASX)
|
Australia
|
Kibaran
Resources, Ltd. (KNL: ASX)
|
Tanzania
|
Nacional de
Grafite (private)
|
Brazil
|
Saint Jean
Carbon (SJL: TSX.V or TORVF: OTC/QB)
|
Sri Lanka
|
Talga Resources,
Ltd. (TLG: ASX)
|
Sweden
|
Valence
Industries, Inc. (VLQCF: OTC/QB)
|
Australia
|
Some of the
existing graphite producers have had difficulty keeping bills paid and
several have shut down production due to low graphite selling prices. Statistica reports that flake graphite prices
declined approximately 49% from 2011 to 2014, predicted a further decline of
10% through the current year 2016.
Bringing on new production in the current price dynamic may sound the
death knell for companies that are not able to produce at a low price. Any investor looking at the graphite market
should look carefully at the business model and proposed operating structure
before taking a long position.
This may be one
reason the stocks of the companies listed above are trading more like options
on management’s ability to execute on strategic plans than on the present value
of future cash flows from the sale of graphite.
That said, some might consider the current share prices as modest premiums to play the sector’s future.
The next and final post in this series will look at
existing graphite producers.
Neither the author of the Small Cap Strategist web
log, Crystal Equity Research nor its affiliates have a beneficial interest in
the companies mentioned herein.
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