EV demand driving long-term nickel, cobalt outlook, Sherritt says

The demand for nickel and cobalt as battery materials for electric vehicles (EV) will keep their long-term bullish fundamentals intact, according to Canadian miner Sherritt International.

Over the past six months, numerous carmakers and governments have announced plans for significant investments to expand EV production capacity to meet growing demand, the company said.

Sherritt produces nickel plus cobalt by-product in Moa, Cuba, and Fort Saskatchewan, Canada.

“In 2020, more than 3.2 million EVs were sold despite the [Covid-19] pandemic. Industry observers estimate that the number of EVs sold in 2021 will grow by approximately 70%,” Sherritt said in its first-quarter production results on Wednesday April 28.

“As a result of Class 1 nickel’s unique properties, it remains the dominant metal in cathode chemistries being adopted by automakers,” the company added.

Nickel prices have pulled back from a multi-year high in February of $19,722 per tonne, a level last seen in September 2014.

The market closed above $17,000 per tonne for the first time since March 3 at $17,410 per tonne on April 28.

According to Sherritt, the pullback was principally driven by the announcement in early March by Tsingshan, a stainless steel producer based in China, that it plans to supply 100,000 tonnes of a nickel intermediate product amenable for use in EV batteries, starting in October 2021.

The initial supposition was that this development would address the shortfall in nickel supply needed for the surge in demand for EVs expected in the coming years, Sherritt said.

But since then, questions have been raised about Tsingshan’s process, Sherritt said.

These include the increased amount of carbon emissions its pyro-metallurgical process will create, the capital spend required to refine nickel matte to a purer form, and the reduced recoverability of by-product metals, which would increase production costs and reduce by-product credits.

Cobalt
Similarly, the Canadian company said, the outlook for cobalt over the long term remained bullish because demand from the EV sector in China alone was expected to grow annually by 26% until 2025.

Cobalt prices have risen this year, Sherritt said, on reports that consumers in China have started to stockpile inventory to take advantage of weak prices, in anticipation of stronger demand from accelerated growth of EV demand.

Fastmarkets’ latest price assessment for cobalt, standard grade, in-whs Rotterdam, was $20.50-22.00 per lb on April 29. This compared with $15.20-15.65 per lb a year earlier.

Sherritt reported first-quarter finished nickel production of 4,188 tonnes, up by 9% from the 3,836 tonnes produced in the first quarter of 2020. Finished cobalt production in the period was 477 tonnes, up by 19% year-on-year from 400 tonnes.

The company expected lower second-quarter finished nickel and cobalt production due to the annual maintenance shutdown of the refinery in Fort Saskatchewan.

This year’s shutdown will be a full-facility procedure, including all of the refinery and utility plants, which occurs once every six years. It will therefore continue for around 11 days instead of the usual five days, and has already been factored into the company’s production guidance for the year, the company said.

Sherritt expected to produce 32,000-34,000 tonnes of finished nickel and 3,300-3,600 tonnes of finished cobalt in 2021.

What to read next
Read Fastmarkets' monthly battery raw materials market update for May 2025, focusing on raw materials including lithium, cobalt, nickel, graphite and more
Cobalt Holdings plans to acquire 6,000 tonnes of cobalt. Following their $230M London Stock Exchange listing, this move secures a key cobalt reserve. With the DRC’s export ban affecting prices, the decision reflects shifting industry dynamics
The recent US-China agreement to temporarily reduce tariffs is a major step for global trade, with tariffs on US goods entering China dropping from 125% to 10% and on Chinese goods entering the US decreasing from 145% to 30% starting May 14. While this has boosted markets and created optimism, key industries like autos and steel remain affected, leaving businesses waiting for clearer long-term trade policies.
BEK pulp prices in Europe dropped $40/tonne in April, driven by US import tariff uncertainties and weaker demand in China.
The US-China trade truce announced on May 12 has brought cautious optimism to China’s non-ferrous metals markets, signaling a possible shift in global trade. Starting May 14, the removal of additional tariffs has impacted sectors like battery raw materials, minor metals and base metals such as zinc and nickel, with mixed reactions. While the improved sentiment has lifted futures prices and trade activity, the long-term effects remain unclear due to challenges like supply-demand pressures and export controls.
The publication of Fastmarkets’ assessments of Shanghai bonded aluminium, zinc and nickel stocks for April 30 were delayed because of a reporter error. Fastmarkets’ pricing database has been updated. The data effective for April 30 was published on May 7 as a result. The following assessments were affected:Shanghai aluminium bonded stocksShanghai zinc bonded stocksShanghai nickel […]