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In the first two parts of this series, we examined the clash between short-term market realities and long-term decarbonization goals and how declining ore quality complicates the green transition. Now, we turn to the financial mechanism at the heart of the problem: the investment gap.
Capital is available for decarbonization but is increasingly selective and contingent on clear returns. When steel margins thin and grade spreads narrow significantly, project pipelines stall. This is the paradox miners and steelmakers face – iron ore volatility keeps the pen off the final investment decision even when the long-term need is undeniable.
The route to green steel is narrow. Hydrogen-based Direct Reduced Iron (DRI) and gas-based DRI routes require a very specific feedstock: pellets with 67% iron content or higher, low gangue and tight impurity control.
These high-grade pellets enable low-carbon steelmaking, but they are scarce. Today, they represent less than 5% of global seaborne supply. Under net-zero pathways such as IEA NZE, demand for DR-grade pellets could rise five- to tenfold by 2050. Yet, despite this projected surge in demand, the supply pipeline remains dangerously thin.
As green finance grows more selective and demand forecasts face uncertainty, the industry needs a solid case for investment. Transparent, durable pricing signals are essential to unlock the capital required to accelerate progress.
Iron ore is historically one of the most volatile commodities, and recent years have been no exception. The 62% Fe fines index has swung dramatically, moving from highs of $220 per tonne in 2021 to below $100 per tonne recently. This cyclical nature makes long-term planning difficult.
Crucially, DR-grade pellet premiums are equally unstable. In just three years, premiums have fallen from $95 per tonne to $38 per tonne.
When margins compress, steel mills cut their spending on premiums. This narrows the grade spreads and erodes the incentive for miners to commit billions of dollars to new beneficiation and pelletizing capacity. Why build a premium product plant if the market won’t consistently pay for the premium?
Several factors keep the market in this state of flux:
The mismatch between available climate capital and the day-to-day economics of commodities is slowing progress.
To break the paradox, the market needs structure and certainty.
The iron ore paradox won’t resolve overnight. However, the risks of inaction are growing. Without credible, durable price signals, the industry faces a structural shortfall in DR-grade supply just as green steel ambitions accelerate.
Hedging tools and long-term contracts can mitigate some volatility but they aren’t a complete solution. ESG capital is not limitless and uncertainty around hydrogen adoption still lingers.
For miners and pelletizers, the challenge is clear: volatility must give way to visibility. Only then can the sector finance the feedstock of a decarbonized future.