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Oroco Resource Corp V.OCO

Alternate Symbol(s):  ORRCF

Oroco Resource Corp. is a Canadian mineral exploration company. The Company is engaged in the acquisition and exploration of mineral properties in Mexico. It holds a net 85.5% interest in those central concessions that comprise 1,173 hectares (ha) (the Core Concessions) of The Santo Tomas Project, located in northwestern Mexico. It also holds an 80% interest in an additional 7,861 ha of mineral concessions surrounding and adjacent to the Core Concessions (for a total Project area of 9,034 hectares, or 22,324 acres). The Project hosts a large, outcropping porphyry copper deposit comprised of fracture-hosted and disseminated copper and molybdenum sulphides with significant gold and silver credits. Its Xochipala Property is comprised of the Celia Gene (100 ha) and the contiguous Celia Generosa (93 ha) concessions. Its Salvador Property is a 100-hectare mining concession, which lies around 25 kilometers (kms) to the west of the Xochipala Property and 30 kms west of Chilpancingo, Guerrero.


TSXV:OCO - Post by User

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Post by MariuszSkoniecznyon May 04, 2019 11:28am
120 Views
Post# 29710633

Tesla warns of coming battery minerals shortage

Tesla warns of coming battery minerals shortage

While demand for electric vehicles (EVs) continues to soar, investment in companies mining for the so-called battery metals is lagging far behind, which may trigger an upcoming global shortage of those minerals, a Tesla executive has warned.

The EVs manufacturer pioneer, Reuters reports, has also said it believed that prices for key elements in the making of rechargeable batteries, including cobalt, lithium, nickel and copper, could increase exponentially as a consequence of limited supply.

The comments by Sarah Maryssael, Tesla’s global supply manager of battery metals, echo those of other carmakers, such as Ford Motor, Toyota and BMW, who have said the auto industry would need to invest directly in battery metals mines in order to secure supply over the next three to five years.

 

Ford, which plans to launch new EVs as soon as next year, has been reducing the proportion of cobalt it uses to lower its dependency on it. And while the company doesn’t see the need to participate in mining, or have direct cobalt offtake agreements, it has admitted it may re-evaluate that decision in the future.

Early last year, Toyota Motor Corp, Asia’s No.1 car manufacturer, said it had found a way to make EVs more affordable and less vulnerable to shortages in supply of the key elements needed.

The announcement followed Samsung SDI's. South Korea’s leading battery maker plans to recycle cobalt from used mobile phones and develop lithium-ion batteries with minimum content of the metal, or no cobalt at all, as a way to offset soaring commodity prices.

BMW is another of the top carmakers that expects demand for battery metals to go ballistic. It predicts the need for those materials will grow 10-fold by 2025. Volkswagen is also on a $50B offensive.

Most carmakers have chosen nickel-manganese-cobalt batteries (NMC). Tesla's favoured battery technology – nickel-cobalt-aluminum (or NCA) – already uses less than 3% cobalt.

According to Germany’s Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), supplies of battery metals are likely to be limited as soon as 2050.

Northvolt begins building Europes largest lithium-ion battery plant

Tesla's Gigafactory in Nevada. (Image courtesy of Tesla.)

(With files from Bloomberg)


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