Glencore said that due to the cobalt export ban imposed by the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), a significant portion of its cobalt output may remain unsold by the end of 2025. As the world’s largest cobalt supplier, the DRC implemented a four-month export suspension starting in February this year, which was later extended by three months, aiming to address the global cobalt oversupply and to work out export quota allocations among mining companies. Glencore stated that the ban is expected to significantly tighten cobalt supply and accelerate inventory drawdowns, thereby supporting prices. Although the company is conservative about future sales and believes that even if it cannot sell any DRC cobalt for the rest of the year, the financial impact will be limited, it added that any sales of some volumes would be an upside. In the first half of this year, Glencore’s own cobalt production rose 19% year-on-year, and it expects production to reach 42,000 to 45,000 tons in 2025, up from 38,200 tons in 2024.
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