Look to Australia for new tin supply

Peter Kettle, manager of statistics and market studies at the International Tin Institute (ITI), had some interesting things to say about tin at the close of the Investing in Tin conference in London. As reported in Robin Bromby’s column in The Australian, Kettle remarks that Australia could be the main source of new tin mine production in the next five years.

By way of background, notes Bromby, the tin market is 10,000 tonnes in deficit, which is a fairly large chunk of the paltry 300,000 tonnes a year currently produced by the world’s tin mines. Despite the undersupply situation, the price of the metal has slid over the last three months, from $11/lb around the begining of September to just over $9/lb on Friday.

Still, that’s a lot higher than when the price of tin collapsed in the mid-80s and most tin mines closed.

Bromby notes that of six companies that made presentations at the conference, five are Australian-owned. They include:

  • Metals X- 50% owner of the Renison mine, Australia’s largest tin producer.
  • Consolidated Tin Mines- owns the historic Heberton tin field, which began operations in 1879.
  • Kasbah Resources- working on a feasibility study for a tin project in Morocco and plans to buy another tin mine there.
  • Stellar Resources- moving to complete ownership of the Heemskirk deposit near the Renison mine.
  • Magna Mining- planning to mine tin tailings in Siberia.

 

 

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