DoomsdayLullaby t1_iujyvtl wrote
Reply to comment by reeltub97 in Indonesia eyes OPEC-style cartel for battery metals by bjohn876
>The United States is the largest producer but not the largest exporter because oil is produced primarily for domestic refinement and consumption.
That hasn't been true for the past decade since the shale oil boom. It's one of the largest exporters of oil and the largest exporter of refined oil products.
Battery production encompasses several key minerals, not just lithium.
>It doesn't matter if a cartel does control 58% of exports if a country that controls 42% of exports can undercut them
It does, and especially does when the needed capacity is several orders of magnitude higher than current production levels.
>OPEC is the exception not the rule and it doesn't seem obvious that the economic or political conditions that made forming OPEC are even possible in the lithium market.
Seems like quite the assertion based on little more than intuition.
reeltub97 t1_iuk0gio wrote
Rare earth metals and oil production are not equivalents. Lithium is not the only metal for batteries, but it's necessary for lithium ion batteries which is where rising demand for batteries is coming from. The fact that multiple metals are needed for battery production only supports the fact that forming a global cartel to coordinate the production of each is impractical. OPEC can influence oil prices because it can manage production of a single resource it holds in large quantities. How would abattery metal OPEC equivalent coordinate that? It's a safe intuition to rest on that forming global cartels is the exception not the rule when they are relatively rare in mineral exports. The only similarities between oil and battery metal production seems to be that both come from the ground. I would think it's safe to assume that the economic and political wrangling of enough countries that produce meaningful proportions of battery metals is not something that is likely to succeed. After all, the belief that "all it takes is a significant portion of the market" ignores that global cartels actually aren't very common.
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