Top 50 mining stocks lose $600bn in market value from peak
After a brutal second quarter, investors in the world’s 50 biggest mining companies are in full retreat as metal prices slump and uncertainty grips the sector.
After a brutal second quarter, investors in the world’s 50 biggest mining companies are in full retreat as metal prices slump and uncertainty grips the sector.
Key moves in the mining sector.
The carmaker broke ground on a new cell factory in Salzgitter, Germany, one of five such facilities in Europe under its PowerCo unit.
Demands for higher revenues from companies, tougher environmental rules and changes to laws have deepened risks across Latin America, index shows.
British Columbia firm looks to unleash a new era of resource extraction, raising questions over how to protect deep-sea ecosystems we know little about.
FortisBC, which built the province's first liquefied natural gas plant, is now planning to become B.C.'s first low-carbon hydrogen producer.
To be run by the British Geological Survey, the centre will use the data to help to find ways to source minerals needed for green technologies.
Researchers believe the EU will have to build its own urban mining and refining operations to decrease its raw materials dependency.
Chief Executive Officer Herbert Diess called China the company’s “second home market” this week.
A metallic NATO is starting to take shape, though no-one is calling it that just yet, writes Andy Home.