Breaking News

Govt Enforces ‘Melt and Pour’ Rule for All Steel in Public Projects Nippon Steel expected to finalize U.S. Steel acquisition at $55 per share NMDC Limited reports a 38% drop in Q4 FY24 consolidated net profit RINL to Raise $23 Million Through Land Sales Amid Crisis

Rio Tinto Chairman; Global mining investment is too low to support energy transition

299395_1713252762_small.jpg
Raw Material 16 Apr 2024 01:02 PM IST Reuters

According to Rio Tinto Chairman Dominic Barton, low rates of investment in the global mining sector have put the global energy transition at risk, widening the supply gap in critical minerals like copper. “The gap is humungous, and I am actually very worried about whether we will be able to close (it),” Barton said via video link at the Ecosperity conference in Singapore.

The global effort to slash climate-warming carbon dioxide emissions will depend on securing large supplies of minerals like copper, lithium and cobalt required to build electric vehicles, solar plants and wind farms. The amount of metals required for each kilowatt of generation capacity has risen by 50% since 2010, and electric cars require six times more minerals than traditional combustion engine, according to the International Energy Agency.