The Economist - UK (2022-03-26)

(Antfer) #1

72 Finance & economics TheEconomistMarch26th 2022


risks.  As  the  troubled  mining  projects  in
Russia  show,  important  investments  can
become  victims  of  local  conditions  and
geopolitics.  Huge  rents  could  corrode  do­
mestic  markets  and  political  institutions;
autocrats enriched by electrodollars could
make mischief beyond their borders. Saad
Rahim of Trafigura, a trading firm, says the
shift to clean fuels is “less an energy transi­
tion  than  a  commodity  transition”.  It  will
be a turbulent one. 
The green boom is not just another “su­
percycle”,  as  prolonged  periods  of  high
commodity  prices  are  known.  The  last
such  cycle,  early  this  century,  was  fuelled
by  rapid  urbanisation  and  industrialisa­
tion  in  China.  The  combined  real  gdpof
Brazil and Russia, two resource­rich econ­
omies,  grew  by  two­thirds  between  2000
and 2014. But the rally was largely driven by
China  alone.  When  the  country’s  leaders
decided it should build fewer factories and
flats,  the  commodity  giants  suffered.  The
green  transition,  by  contrast,  stems  from
the  decisions  of  many  governments,  not
one. And decarbonising the world is likely
to be the job of decades. 
Another big difference lies in the mate­
rials  in  demand.  China’s  splurge  burned
through heaps of coal, iron and steel. The
green boom centres on non­ferrous metals
that are more niche. Their combined annu­
al revenues today, at $600bn, is equivalent
to only a fifth of that of the bulk materials
that  China  favoured.  There  may  be  more
explosive growth to come. 
To  understand  which  commodity  pro­
ducers stand to win and lose from a green
transition, we construct a simple scenario
for  the  use  of  ten  “energy­linked”  com­
modities  in  2040,  assuming  that  global
warming by 2100 stays below 2°C. Based on
data  from  a  range  of  industry  sources,  we
project demand and revenue for three fos­
sil  fuels  (oil,  gas,  coal)  and  seven  metals
(aluminium, cobalt, copper, lithium, nick­
el, silver and zinc) that are critical to build­
ing  an  electricity  economy.  We  assume
that  prices  remain  at  today’s  elevated  lev­
els, prompting miners to exploit untapped
deposits. And we assume that a producer’s
market  share  in  2040  is  in  line  with  its
share of known reserves. 
Our  findings  suggest  the  world  will  be
less reliant on energy­related resources in
2040  than  it  is  today—largely  because
wind and sunshine, the sources of the fu­
ture, are free. Total spending on our basket
of ten commodities falls to 3.4% of global
gdp, from 5.8% in 2021. Spending on fossil
fuels,  relative  to  world  gdp,falls  by  half
(and  would  shrink  further  were  it  not  for
gas).  The  revenue  from  green  metals  re­
mains smaller, but rises from 0.5% to 0.7%
of gdp.It nearly triples in absolute terms. 
The number of big producers of energy­
linked  commodities  falls  over  time:  48
stand  to  pocket  sales  equivalent  to  more

than5%oftheirgdp, downfrom 58 in 2021
(seechart2).Morethanhalfoftotalspend­
inggoestowardsautocracies.
You can group producers into three
buckets,basedontheexpectedchangein
theirrevenuesfromthetenenergy­linked
commoditiesbetweennowand2040.The
firstcomprisesthewinners—thegreensu­
perpowers. These electrostates include
some rich democracies. Australia has
trovesofeverymetalincludedinoursam­
ple.Chileishometo42%oftheworld’s
lithiumreservesanda quarterofitscopper
deposits,much ofthem intheAtacama
desert (pictured on the previous page).
Othersareautocracies.Congohas46%of
globalcobaltreserves(andproduces70%
oftheworld’soutputtoday).Chinaishome
toaluminium,copperandlithium.Poorer
democracies in Asia and LatinAmerica
mayalsohitthejackpot.Indonesiasitson
mountainsofnickel.Peruholdsnearlya
quarteroftheworld’ssilver.
Thesecondbucketcomprisescountries
withrevenuesthatstayflat,orfalla little.It
includesthelow­costmembersoftheOr­
ganisation of the Petroleum Exporting
Countries(opec)—includingIran,Iraqand
Saudi Arabia—and Russia. Although oil
revenueshrinks,theirshareofitexpands

from45% today to 57% in 2040.Other
countries, such as America, Brazil and
Canada,losefossil­fuelearningsbutare
abletotapvastmineraldeposits.
Higher­costpetrostateslosethemost.
Manyoil­richnationsinnorthAfrica(Al­
geria,Egypt),sub­SaharanAfrica(Angola,
Nigeria)andEurope(Britain,Norway)see
their revenues shrivel.Small states like
South Sudan, Timor Lesteand Trinidad
havetheirs hithard. Thepain does not
sparesomeGulfstates:theproceedscap­
turedbyBahrainandQatar,forinstance,
declinebya fifthormore.
Whatmightpreventthenewcommodi­
tysuperpowersemerging?Thekeyingredi­
entiscapitalspending.Theieaestimates
thatmajorminesthatcameonlineinthe
pastdecadetook,onaverage, 16 yearsto
build.Tomeetboomingdemandby2040,
theindustrymustsplashoutonnewpro­
jectsnow.Thesumsrequiredarebig.Ju­
lianKettleofWoodMackenzie,a consul­
tancy, reckons $2trn must be spent on
green­metal exploration andproduction
(e&p) by2040.Recentprojectssuggestdig­
gingoutenoughcopperandnickelalone
wouldrequire$250bn­350bnincapitalex­
penditure(capex)wellbefore2030.

Pedaltothemetal
Someoftheoutlayistakingplace.Anglo
American,a miner,aimstoexpanditscop­
peroutputby50­60%by2030.“Wewillde­
liverourpartofthebargain,”saysMarkCu­
tifani,itsboss.Manyotherswillnot.Burnt
bythecommoditycrashofthemid­2010s,
miningmajorshavereducedinvestment.
LiberumCapital,aninvestmentbank,cal­
culatesthatannualcoppere&pcapexhas
fallenbyhalfsince2014,to$14bn.Asprices
rise,sodoprofits.Butcashisbeinggiven
backtoinvestorsratherthanredeployed.
“Supplygrowthhasalmostbecomea dirty
word,”says Stephen Gill ofPala Invest­
ments,a venture­capitalfirm.
OnlyChinaisspendinga lot.InKolwe­
zi,inCongo’scobaltbelt,barefootchildren
greetallforeignerswithshoutsof“nihao”.
Chinese groups have nabbed most big
commercialdeposits;AlbertAbel,anarti­
sanalminer,complainstheyhavebought
mostsmallminestoo.Glencore,anadven­
turousSwisstrader,istheonlyWestern
firmtohavea foothold.InIndonesiaChi­
neseminersareclearingswathesofrain­
foresttodigoutnickel.
Thecapexdroughtisa resultofthree
dauntingproblems:theindustry’slimited
firepower, diminishing investment re­
turnsandrisingpoliticalrisk.Startwith
firepower. Though what miners must
spendovertwodecadesisequivalentto
onlyfouryearsoftypicaloile&pcapex,it
stillseemsbeyondthecapacityofthecom­
parativelytinysector.Evenbigminerscan
onlyfundoneseriousprojectata time.
Thismightbefixedbytappingcapital

Theenergymajors
Numberofcountriesbycommodity
revenueas%ofGDP*,200forecast

Sources:BenchmarkMinerals;Bloomberg;IEA;IMF;
Liberum Capital; LME; Our World in Data; Refinitiv;
RystadEnergy; USGS; Wood Mackenzie; The Economist

*Regimetypeasof 2021

2

Over%

Over10%

Over20%

403020100

Autocracies Democracies

Material heft
Top ten producing countries’ share of revenues, %

Sources:Benchmark Minerals; Bloomberg; IEA; IMF;
LiberumCapital;LME; Refinitiv; Rystad Energy; USGS;
WoodMackenzie;The Economist

1

Copper

Nickel

Aluminium

Zinc

Lithium

Silver

Cobalt

Oil

Gas

Coal

10095908580757065

202 2040 forecast
Fossil fuels

Green metals
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