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RecycLiCo Battery Materials Inc V.AMY

Alternate Symbol(s):  AMYZF

RecycLiCo Battery Materials Inc. is a battery materials company specializing in sustainable lithium-ion battery recycling and materials production. Its segments include the research and development of recycling battery cathode waste in lithium-ion batteries and the acquisition, exploration and development of interests in mineral resource projects in British Columbia, Canada and Arizona, USA. It has developed advanced technologies that recover battery-grade materials from lithium-ion batteries, addressing the global demand for environmentally friendly solutions in energy storage. It recovers up to 99% of cathode metals from battery waste and upcycles them into high purity, battery-ready materials. Integrate a bespoke RecycLiCo Clean Spot plant and its patented closed loop, multi-tons per day, lithium-ion battery recycling and upcycling process-on-site-within a client’s battery factory or battery recycling operation. Its properties include Artillery Peak, Rocher Deboule and Lonnie.


TSXV:AMY - Post by User

Post by bayoubuckson May 22, 2012 4:04pm
274 Views
Post# 19934828

China growth?

China growth?

Chinese Iron Ore Buyers Defer Imports Cargoes, Mirae Says

By Bloomberg News - May 21, 2012 4:01 AM CT

Iron ore and coking coal buyers in China are seeking to defer importing cargoes as domestic steel mills reduced output amid lower prices, according to Mirae Asset Securities Co.

“Moderately improving demand can’t keep up with the surge in steel capacity, leading to falling prices and forcing steelmakers to cut output,” analyst Henry Liu said by phone today from Hong Kong. “We started to hear of such deferrals in the past month.”

China’s crude-steel output soared to a record 61.58 million metric tons in March and declined 1.6 percent to 60.57 million tons last month. Steel prices fell for a fifth-straight week to 4,227 a ton on May 18, according to researcher Beijing Antaike Information Development Co., as April industrial production, new yuan loans and trade figures all missed economists’ estimates.

“We learned from major trading firms that the execution of long-term contracts are stable, while spot market deals have been declining in recent years,” Jim Lin, a Beijing-based analyst at Wood Mackenzie Ltd., said by phone. “We can’t say at this point that such deferrals will become the market trend.”

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