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Fortune Minerals Ltd T.FT

Alternate Symbol(s):  FTMDF

Fortune Minerals Limited is a mining company. It is engaged in the exploration and development of mineral properties in Canada. It is focused on developing the NICO Cobalt-Gold-Bismuth-Copper Project in the Northwest Territories and Alberta that produces a bulk concentrate for shipment to a refinery that it plans to construct in southern Canada. It also owns the satellite Sue-Dianne copper-silver-gold deposit located 25 kilometers (km) north of the NICO Deposit and is a potential future source of incremental mill feed to extend the life of the NICO mill and concentrator. It also maintains the right to repurchase the Arctos anthracite coal deposits in northwest British Columbia. It also has a 100% interest in these 116 hectares of property south of Great Slave Lake with copper, silver, gold, lead and zinc showings. It has a 1% net smelter royalty covering 78 hectares of land positioned in a former silver mining district, located south of the Eldorado mining district at Great Bear Lake.


TSX:FT - Post by User

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Post by Unfortunateon Jul 20, 2018 1:46am
403 Views
Post# 28342901

Panasonic drops Sherritt's cobalt supply

Panasonic drops Sherritt's cobalt supply
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-tesla-cuba-cobalt-exclusive/exclusive-teslas-battery-maker-suspends-cobalt-supplier-amid-sanctions-concern-idUSKBN1K92Q9

Exclusive: Tesla's battery maker suspends cobalt supplier amid sanctions concern


LONDON/TOKYO (Reuters) - Panasonic Corp (6752.T) said it was unable to determine how much of the cobalt used in batteries it makes for Tesla cars comes from Cuba, a country subject to U.S. sanctions, and that it had suspended relations with a Canadian supplier as a result of its concerns.

The Japanese electronics maker, the exclusive supplier of batteries to Tesla Inc (TSLA.O), made the comments following questions from Reuters about whether the batteries contained Cuban cobalt.

Two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters that some of the cobalt that Panasonic uses to make Tesla’s batteries is mined in Cuba by Canadian supplier Sherritt International Corp (S.TO).

Panasonic said it was unable to tell how much cobalt sourced from Cuba via its Canadian supplier ended up in the batteries it provided to the U.S. market “due to co-mingling of sources by its suppliers in several phases of manufacturing processes”.

“Panasonic has chosen to suspend its relationship with its Canadian supplier,” a spokeswoman said, without naming the supplier. She added that Panasonic had used cobalt from the Canadian supplier for batteries used in the Tesla Model S and Model X, but only after February this year.

“Panasonic has sought guidance from the U.S. Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) regarding its interpretation of the scope of the U.S. ban on Cuban-origin imports,” she said.

A U.S. Treasury official, who asked not to be named, said Treasury does not discuss investigations and could not confirm whether one existed.

The United States imposed sanctions on Cuba after Fidel Castro nationalized swathes of American assets more than 50 years ago.

Tesla, when asked for comment by Reuters, did not address questions about whether its batteries contained Cuban cobalt or whether that could potentially put the company in breach of sanctions.

A spokesman said: “Tesla is aiming to achieve close to zero usage of cobalt in the near future.”

The electric vehicle maker, run by billionaire Elon Musk, said in May that it had been working for years to reduce the amount of cobalt it uses in its batteries.

Sherritt declined to comment on questions about whether it sold cobalt to Panasonic.

“We don’t respond to questions about specific client activities,” Sherritt’s spokesman Joe Racanelli said.

“We’ve been working in Cuba for 25 years and we sell our Class 1 nickel and cobalt that’s refined from our facility in Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, to customers in Europe and Asia.”

SCRAMBLE FOR RESOURCES

An anticipated electric vehicle revolution has sent demand and prices for cobalt - a crucial component in car batteries - surging over the past two years.

Companies are under pressure to prove that the minerals they consume are sourced from mines that do not employ children or cause major environmental damage. Global cobalt supply is dominated by the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is riven by conflict and political instability.
 

Sherritt produces Cobalt at the Moa mine in Cuba, a 50-50 joint venture between the Canadian company and the state-owned General Nickel Company of Cuba.

Panasonic buys cobalt from Sherritt and the metal is then turned into specialized cobalt chemicals by a contractor, according to the sources.

Panasonic is also supplied with cobalt chemicals by Sumitomo Metal Mining Co Ltd (5713.T), which produces most of its material in the Philippines, the sources said.

The sources said that Sumitomo supplied the bulk of the cobalt used in Tesla batteries. Reuters was unable to determine what proportion of the cobalt used in Panasonic’s batteries made for Tesla came from Sherritt.

Sumitomo declined to comment on its supply chain.

When asked about a potential cobalt supply crunch, a Panasonic spokeswoman said, after the Reuters report, that the company “will secure its demand of cobalt from existing and new sources”. The procurement from the Canadian supplier it suspended was not a majority, she added.


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Well at the very least it should make Canada sourced cobalt more appealing

 

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