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Battery raw materials supply is expanding, but access, cost, partnerships and commercial certainty are becoming harder to predict. This is where the region’s most influential producers, manufacturers, investors and policymakers come together — while decisions are still being shaped.
Korean battery and materials companies face intensifying pressure: competition from integrated Chinese supply chains, rising localisation requirements, and the challenge of securing feedstock at a cost that protects margins.
For Australian producers, the challenge is no longer extraction — it is how to diversify downstream pathways, secure access to conversion capacity, and strengthen control over where value is realised. A significant share of lithium production is still processed offshore.
For Chinese battery materials producers, manufacturers and recyclers, the focus is shifting from domestic scale to regional expansion — where to grow across Southeast Asia while maintaining cost competitiveness and supply chain control.
For Japanese companies, the challenge is no longer access — it is securing supply early enough, and on competitive enough terms, to remain competitive. Supply is increasingly being secured through long-term offtake, JVs and integrated processing, particularly across lithium, nickel and recycled materials.
For investors, traders and supply chain players based in Singapore, the challenge is no longer access to opportunities — it is understanding which projects will secure demand, attract partners and ultimately deliver. Capital is not absent; it is selective.
For Indonesian producers, the focus is shifting from growth to securing long-term demand and structuring offtake on viable terms. Nickel and broader battery materials capacity has scaled rapidly, but buyers are becoming more selective — on pricing, ESG requirements and long-term agreements.
Connect directly with senior decision-makers from across the battery raw materials value chain — producers, manufacturers, investors, recyclers and policymakers in one room.
Delegates have the opportunity to visit CoreMax’s nickel sulphate facility — a first-hand look at Vietnam’s rapidly emerging role in Southeast Asia’s battery supply chain.
Engage directly with Southeast Asian policymakers shaping industrial strategy, incentives, localisation requirements and market access conditions.
Gain clarity on which projects, partnerships and processing routes are credible, which carry risk, and where value is most resilient across the battery materials value chain.
Vietnam is rapidly becoming a key node in Asia’s battery supply chain. Assess first-mover opportunities in processing, manufacturing and recycling before positions are taken.
Offtake agreements, supply partnerships and investment decisions are shaped at events like this. Attend while positions are still open — not after they are already defined.
Join the region’s most influential battery raw materials event. Positions fill early — register now.