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Wednesday 06 May 2026
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Featured

KoBold - Building the "Google Maps of the Crust": Can KoBold’s AI Survive the Zambian Copperbelt?

Mfikeyi Makayi, CEO KoBold Metals Africa Photographer: Dwayne Senior/Bloomberg via Getty Images

KOBOLD Metals has broken ground on what will be Zambia’s largest copper mine, a $2.3bn project that ranks among the biggest investment programmes in the southern African country’s history, said Bloomberg News.

The Mingomba mine, located near Zambia’s border with the Democratic Republic of Congo, will eventually produce more than 300,000 tons of copper a year, placing it among the continent’s top sources of the metal.

Silicon Valley-based KoBold, which is backed by billionaires including Bill Gates and Sam Altman, used proprietary artificial intelligence technology to identify a highly concentrated copper resource deep underground after acquiring the project in December 2022. The company has moved to begin construction before engineering studies are complete.

“We cannot afford to go slow,” said Mfikeyi Makayi, CEo of KoBold’s Africa unit, noting that similar projects typically take more than 15 years to reach production.

However, KoBold faces significant technical challenges, said Bloomberg News.

Mingomba will be among the deepest high-grade copper mines in the world, at roughly 1,700 metres below surface, in a region already known for exceptionally wet underground conditions requiring large-scale pumping operations. A final cost estimate will follow completion of an engineering study early next year, said president Josh Goldman. The company is still weighing options for smelting and refining.

KoBold has yet to bring a mine into production anywhere. The Mingomba project nonetheless bolsters Zambian president Hakainde Hichilema’s drive to more than triple the country’s copper output by early in the next decade, alongside major expansions under way at Barrick Mining and First Quantum Minerals.


https://www.miningmx.com/trending/65158-kobold-breaks-ground-on-giant-zambia-copper-mine/

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Macro

White House Believes it's Close to Agreeing Memorandum of Understanding with Iran

White House believes it's close to agreeing memorandum of understanding with Iran - Axios.published at 10:34

Axios is reporting that the White House believes it is close to a memorandum of understanding with Iran on ending the war. 

The outlet cites two US officials and two other sources it describes as briefed on the issue, who are all unnamed in the report. 

It describes the memorandum as a one-page memo which could set a framework for more detailed nuclear negotiations. Among the provisions it lists are a suspension on Iranian nuclear enrichment, the lifting of sanctions, and restoring free transit through the Strait of Hormuz.

Ending nuclear enrichment and reopening the strait have been key sticking points in the negotiations so far.

Axios cites sources as saying that many of the terms laid out in the memo would be contingent on a final agreement being reached. 

The US expects a response in the next 48 hours, and nothing has been agreed yet, it reports, citing sources. 

The BBC has approached the White House for comment - Iran has not yet commented.


https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/c152zyj0599t

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The Golden Thread - Here's Our Read of Today's Daily

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Oil

Pakistan’s Petroleum Sales Fall 7% in April Amid Rising Fuel Prices

High-speed diesel and petrol demand drops as prices surge, while furnace oil usage rises sharply for power generation.

Pakistan’s petroleum sales fall 7% in April amid rising fuel prices

Pakistan’s petroleum product sales fell by 7% year-on-year in April reaching 1.36 million tonnes, compared to 1.45 million tonnes in the same month last year. The decline reflects continued pressure from high fuel prices and weakening demand in the domestic market.

On a month-on-month basis petroleum sales also dropped by 6%. Excluding furnace oil the decline was more pronounced with overall volumes falling 11% year-on-year and 10% month-on-month to 1.22 million tonnes.

Data shows that rising fuel prices significantly impacted consumption patterns. The average price of motor spirit (petrol) increased by 54% year-on-year to Rs 392.64 per litre, while high-speed diesel rose by 67% to Rs 431.97 per litre, despite the removal of levy on HSD.

High-speed diesel sales dropped by 12% year-on-year in April, mainly due to higher prices and weaker tractor sales in the agriculture sector. Motor spirit sales also declined by 7% under similar pressure.

In contrast furnace oil sales surged by 63% year-on-year, driven by higher electricity generation demand and increased reliance on FO-based power plants amid disruptions in RLNG supply.

On a monthly basis motor spirit sales declined by 8% to 0.61 million tonnes, while high-speed diesel fell by 7% to 0.55 million tonnes. Furnace oil, however, increased sharply by 56% month-on-month, indicating growing dependence on FO for power generation.

Despite monthly declines, overall petroleum sales during the first 10 months of FY2026 rose by 4% year-on-year to 13.76 million tonnes, compared to 13.22 million tonnes in the same period last year. Excluding furnace oil, sales increased by 5% to 13.23 million tonnes.

Product-wise, motor spirit sales stood at 6.41 million tonnes, high-speed diesel at 5.90 million tonnes, and furnace oil at 0.53 million tonnes.

Among oil marketing companies, Pakistan State Oil (PSO) recorded a 5% year-on-year decline in April sales to 0.59 million tonnes. Motor spirit and diesel sales also fell, while furnace oil volumes increased during the month.

During the first 10 months of FY2026, PSO’s market share declined to 42.4%, compared to 44.5% last year. In contrast, Gas & Oil Pakistan Ltd (GO) increased its share to 12%, up from 10.2%.

Attock Petroleum Limited (APL) reported a 6% decline in sales to 0.12 million tonnes, with its market share easing to 8.2%. Wafi Energy Pakistan (formerly Shell Pakistan) maintained stable volumes, slightly improving its market share to 8%. Meanwhile, Hascol Petroleum recorded a 26% decline, with its share falling to 3.1%.

During July–April FY2026, petroleum levy collection reached approximately Rs 1.28 trillion, according to the report.


https://www.bolnews.com/business/pakistans-petroleum-sales-fall-7-in-april-amid-rising-fuel-prices/

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Oil and Gas

Tullow Oil (LON:TLW) Trading Up 16.9% - Still a Buy?

Tullow Oil logo with Energy background

Tullow Oil plc (LON:TLW)'s stock price was up 16.9% on Tuesday. The stock traded as high as GBX 19.38 and last traded at GBX 18.93. Approximately 79,148,203 shares traded hands during mid-day trading, an increase of 282% from the average daily volume of 20,738,258 shares. The stock had previously closed at GBX 16.20.

Analysts Set New Price Targets

Several analysts recently weighed in on TLW shares. Shore Capital Group reissued a "hold" rating on shares of Tullow Oil in a research note on Tuesday, April 28th. Canaccord Genuity Group lifted their price target on Tullow Oil from GBX 13 to GBX 14 and gave the company a "hold" rating in a research note on Wednesday, April 29th. Two investment analysts have rated the stock with a Hold rating and two have issued a Sell rating to the stock. Based on data from MarketBeat, Tullow Oil currently has a consensus rating of "Reduce" and a consensus target price of GBX 13.85.

Tullow Oil Stock Performance

The stock has a 50 day moving average of GBX 12.38 and a 200 day moving average of GBX 9.23. The company has a quick ratio of 0.63, a current ratio of 0.52 and a debt-to-equity ratio of -892.65. The company has a market capitalization of £280.25 million, a price-to-earnings ratio of 47.50, a price-to-earnings-growth ratio of -0.19 and a beta of 0.37.

About Tullow Oil

Tullow is an independent energy company that is building a better future through responsible oil and gas development in Africa. Tullow's operations are focused on its core producing assets in Ghana. Tullow is committed to becoming Net Zero on its Scope 1 and 2 emissions by 2030, with a Shared Prosperity strategy that delivers lasting socio-economic benefits for its host nations. The Group is quoted on the London and Ghanaian stock exchanges symbol: TLW. For further information, please refer to: www.tullowoil.com.


https://www.marketbeat.com/instant-alerts/tullow-oil-lontlw-trading-up-169-still-a-buy-2026-05-05/

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Diamondback Energy is Immediately Lifting Higher Oil Output in Response to the Ongoing Oil Price Rally

According to the Bloomberg article (May 4, 2026) and Diamondback’s Q1 2026 earnings release/letter to shareholders:

The company is currently pumping >520,000 barrels per day of oil (3% above its original full-year 2026 guidance midpoint of ~505,000 bpd).

It is raising full-year 2026 guidance to 520,000+ bpd oil and 972,000+ boe/d total (up from the prior 500–510k bpd oil / 926–962k boe/d range).

It is adding drilling rigs and fracking crews in West Texas and slightly increasing 2026 CapEx to ~$3.9 billion (from ~$3.75 billion).

CEO Kaes Van’t Hof described it as a “green light” to sustain these higher levels.

Diamondback’s plays/basins: It is a pure-play Permian Basin operator in West Texas and New Mexico (primarily the Midland and Delaware sub-basins). Key formations include the Wolfcamp, Spraberry, and Bone Spring. It has some exploratory activity in the Barnett/Woodford shales within its Permian acreage.

Other oil & gas companies are lifting output or raising CapEx/drilling activity

The industry response remains cautious and modest overall (focus on capital discipline and shareholder returns), but several operators have announced or signaled increases in response to sustained higher prices. Not a broad “drilling boom” yet—many are waiting to confirm prices hold—but rig counts have ticked up modestly and some public/private players are acting.

Key examples (as of early May 2026):

Continental Resources (Harold Hamm; primarily Williston/Bakken shale, plus some Permian, Anadarko, etc.): First major announcement (early April). Increasing 2026 CapEx budget (reversing a planned ~20% cut from $2.5B) to boost production.

ConocoPhillips (multi-basin, significant Permian): Raised 2026 CapEx guidance (to $12–12.5B range) and will add one new drilling rig in the Permian (Delaware sub-basin) in H2 2026.

ExxonMobil & Chevron (largest Permian players): Already had aggressive Permian growth plans (Exxon ~+113k bpd in 2026); analysts see higher probability they accelerate further if prices stay elevated.

Others (e.g., BP/bpX Energy: planning ~8% shale growth in 2026; Permian Resources, Occidental with modest % growth guidance; private operators responding faster).

Broader context: Baker Hughes US rig count rose for the second straight week to 547 total rigs (as of May 1, 2026; oil rigs at 408). Citi and others project public shale producers could add ~20 rigs + >100k bpd by 2027 if prices hold, with private operators adding more (total US shale potential +815k bpd by 2028).


https://energynewsbeat.co/crude-oil-news/diamondback-energy-is-immediately-lifting-higher-oil-output-in-response-to-the-ongoing-oil-price-rally/

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The One Weird Trick to Lower Gas Prices the Trump Administration Hates

Since President Donald Trump began the war on Iran in February, gas prices in the United States have risen more than $1.40 a gallon, to a national average of $4.45, according to AAA. Even a temporary ceasefire hasn’t stopped the pain at gas stations across the country. Reports of drone and missile attacks Monday kept the world guessing, investors skittish and oil prices high, leaving little hope of relief soon.

Mind you, this is all the opposite of the “energy independence” that Trump promised in his re-election campaign. By prioritizing oil and natural gas, ensuring that the U.S. continues its reliance, this administration has made the country more vulnerable to the volatility that Trump’s war sparked. And by implementing policies that reverse the renewable energy revolution that had been underway, the Trump administration and its Republican allies have made it that much harder to wean ourselves off the fossil fuels holding the global economy hostage.

In many ways, the U.S. has been fortunate. Over the past decade, the U.S. has recorded huge upticks in oil and natural gas production, largely driven by the development of shale oil fracking. The industries’ growth is such that America is a net exporter, with annual liquefied natural gas exports worth more than soybean or corn exports. That surge has helped the U.S. weather the energy crisis kick-started by Trump’s war better than many countries dependent on oil no longer flowing through the Strait of Hormuz.

Our geographic location also has upsides: Iran’s closure of the strait hasn’t affected oil shipments arriving to the U.S. from Mexico and Canada, which account for more than 60% of U.S. petroleum imports. But our reliance on fossil fuels still has drawbacks. As I’ve explained before, the price consumers pay at the pump is tied to the global oil market, which remains volatile. With demand for oil greatly outstripping supply, the U.S. simply doesn’t produce enough to match the millions of barrels unable to make it out of the Persian Gulf.

The countries most affected by the strait’s closure are worried about their vulnerabilities — and, to their credit, some have been taking steps in recent years to address them. Many are increasing reliance on renewable sources of energy, including expansion of solar. (As Heatmap reported in March, the raw materials that go into solar panels and batteries have also been affected by the war, but that mostly affects new production.)


https://www.ms.now/opinion/gas-prices-iran-hormuz-trump-renewable-solar

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Australia Plans $7 Billion Fuel Stockpile

By Irina Slav - May 06, 2026, 12:39 AM CDT

Australia’s government plans to spend A$10 billion, or $7 billion, on building its fuel stock to avoid future supply squeezes.

The plans involve stocking up enough to cover at least 50 days of demand, Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said, as quoted by Reuters today. This means a reserve of 264 million gallons, or about 6.28 million barrels based on a conversion factor of 42 gallons to the barrel.

“The federal budget next week will include an Australian fuel security and resilience package," Albanese told the media. “This is aimed at making sure Australians can have more confidence in protecting our energy sovereignty not just during this crisis but going forward as well, protecting our nation's energy interests.”

The stocks will be managed by the government, which would be a first for Australia. Currently, the country’s fuel stocks are all managed by private companies, and at the moment stand at some 30 days of consumption.

As part of efforts to secure the supply of fuels such as diesel and jet fuel, the government will oblige refiners and energy importers to maintain at least 40 days of supply, up from 30.

Australia is dependent on imported fuels for 80% of its consumption. After the war in the Middle East froze exports from the Persian Gulf, the Albanese government rushed to cushion the blow by releasing 20% of the country’s existing gasoline and diesel fuel reserves and halving the excise duty on fuels. The measure would reduce the cost of filling up a tank by about $13, or A$19, according to the government.

“While Australia's fuel supply outlook remains secure in the near term because of the actions the Albanese Government has taken, the longer this war goes the worse the impacts will be,” Canberra said in March.

Since then, separate states have taken matters into their own hands, approving new oil and gas exploration, looking to secure long-term supply.


https://oilprice.com/Latest-Energy-News/World-News/Australia-Plans-7-Billion-Fuel-Stockpile.html

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Agriculture

Vegetable Oil Markets Firm as Energy Prices Rise - Biofuels International

Vegetable oil markets strengthened through March as escalating geopolitical risks and higher crude oil prices injected fresh momentum into the sector.

The surge in crude values following renewed conflict in the Middle East added a significant risk premium, filtering directly into energy and biofuel markets and lifting demand prospects for key oils such as soybean and rapeseed.

Soybean oil prices reached €1,155 per tonne fob German mill at the end of March, around 6% higher than late February, supported in part by US biofuels policy. However, this level proved short‑lived, with values easing back to roughly €1,105 per tonne in recent weeks.

Rapeseed oil has shown firmer resilience, trading at approximately €1,165 per tonne on 21 April — an 18% year‑on‑year increase — despite generally subdued demand and cautious buying. Tight supplies of rapeseed oil raffinate have yet to stimulate additional purchasing.

According to UFOP, the impact of Germany’s newly adopted greenhouse gas quota framework on domestic markets remains uncertain, though higher RED III targets across the EU are expected to lift biofuel obligations and support rapeseed production. The association also reiterated that national caps on crop‑based biofuels limit usage, leaving no basis to revive the ‘food versus fuel’ debate.

Palm oil has climbed to the top of the vegetable oil price range at around EUR 1,345 per tonne, buoyed by expectations of rising biodiesel demand in Indonesia and Malaysia, though record global output could temper further gains.


https://biofuels-news.com/news/vegetable-oil-markets-firm-as-energy-prices-rise/

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Base Metals

Feds Commit $20M Towards Ontario Cobalt Refinery Project

The federal government announced a $20 million investment in Electra Battery Materials to help establish North America's first cobalt sulfate refinery in Temiskaming Shores, Ontario.

Parliamentary Secretary Pauline Rochefort made the announcement on behalf of Industry Minister Mélanie Joly, delivering funding through the Strategic Response Fund for Electra's $99.4 million facility expansion project.

"Our focus remains on execution, bringing this refinery into production and establishing a reliable domestic source of cobalt sulfate," Electra CEO Trent Mell said. "We appreciate the Government support received to date, which helps drive the project toward our stated target of commissioning in 2027."

The company plans to repurpose and expand its existing refinery to produce battery-grade cobalt sulfate, a critical component in electric vehicle batteries. Once operational at full capacity, the facility will supply cobalt sulfate for up to one million electric vehicles annually.

Construction will create employment for approximately 100 skilled trades workers, while ongoing operations will maintain more than 160 jobs, including 60 full-time positions. The project aims to generate economic activity in Temiskaming Shores and surrounding communities including North Bay and Sudbury.

The refinery will mark the first domestic cobalt sulfate production facility in North America, potentially reducing the automotive sector's reliance on imported battery materials. The processed materials will serve electric vehicle manufacturing, defense applications, semiconductors, and medical technologies.

The investment builds on previous federal commitments to Electra, including $5 million from Natural Resources Canada's Critical Minerals Research Development and Demonstration Program in June 2024 for battery recycling development. The Federal Economic Development Agency for Northern Ontario also contributed an additional $5 million through its Regional Economic Growth through Innovation program.


https://www.canadianminingjournal.com/news/feds-commit-20m-towards-ontario-cobalt-refinery-project/

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Copper Giant Begins Planned Comprehensive PEA for the Mocoa Copper-Molybdenum System with Globally Recognized Development Team

VANCOUVER, BC, May 5, 2026 /CNW/ - Copper Giant Resources Corp. ("Copper Giant" or the "Company") (TSXV: CGNT) (OTCQB: LBCMF) (FRA: 29H0) is pleased to announce the start of the work to file a Preliminary Economic Assessment ("PEA") in accordance with National Instrument 43-101 – Standards of Disclosure for Mineral Projects ("NI 43-101") for the Mocoa copper-molybdenum porphyry project in Putumayo, Colombia (the "Project"). 

It is anticipated that the PEA will evaluate multiple development scenarios -- including a base case and alternatives that consider different scales, capital requirements, and mining approaches, for a system hosting an Inferred resource of 12.7 billion pounds (Blbs) copper-equivalent (CuEq*) at an average grade of 0.51% CuEq*, including 7.7 Blbs of copper at 0.31% Cu and 1.0 Blbs of molybdenum at 0.039% Mo, within 1,120 million tonnes (Mt). 

SLR Consulting ("SLR") has been appointed as Lead Consultant, supported by INTERA Incorporated ("INTERA") for hydrogeology and environmental studies, and Frank Wright Consulting with SGS Canada for metallurgical testing, which is already underway. APEX Geoscience continues to lead the updated Mineral Resource Estimate that will underpin the study. 

This milestone represents an important step in advancing Mocoa toward development. 

The PEA is the next step after the securing of a long-term unified development framework for the Project, the recently updated Mineral Resource Estimate1("MRE"), and the launch of the Company's fully funded 2026 exploration program.


https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/markets/markets-news/Newswire.ca/1707346/copper-giant-begins-planned-comprehensive-pea-for-the-mocoa-copper-molybdenum-system-with-globally-recognized-development-team/

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Steel

Nucor is Raising the Price of Hot-Rolled Steel by $5

Photo – Nucor is raising the price of hot-rolled steel by $5

The average spot price for HRC on the U.S. market is $1,060 per ton

The American company Nucor has raised the spot price for hot-rolled coil (HRC) by another $5 per short ton. As a result, the official price has risen to $1,070 per short ton, according to Kallanish.

The company’s latest price bulletin, released on Monday, indicates at least a temporary slowdown in the pace of price increases. It is worth noting that during each of the previous two weeks, Nucor raised product prices by $10 per short ton.

Delivery times for hot-rolled coil orders remain steady at 3–5 weeks.

The spot base price for HRC from California Steel Industries also rose by $5 this week, to $1,120 per short ton.

Last week, according to Kallanish, the domestic price for hot-rolled coil in the U.S. rose by an average of $10, reaching the range of $1,050–1,060 per short ton.

As a reminder, in the first quarter of this year, Nucor increased total shipments of steel products from its steel mills to 7.028 million tons, a 9% year-on-year increase. The utilization rate of the company’s steel mills for the period rose to 86% compared to 80% in the same period of 2025. The average external sales price per ton of steel products in the first quarter of 2026 increased by 14% year-on-year—to $1,074 per ton.


https://gmk.center/en/news/nucor-is-raising-the-price-of-hot-rolled-steel-by-5/

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Coal

Turning South Africa’s Coal Waste Into Sulphuric Acid Production

BY MUFLIH HIDAYATON MAY 6, 2026

South Africa coal waste sulphuric acid production plant infographic

The Hidden Industrial Chemistry Powering a Global Supply Crisis

Commodity markets rarely announce their vulnerabilities in advance. More often, structural weaknesses emerge quietly, revealed only when geopolitical pressure exposes the fragility beneath decades of assumed stability. The global sulphur supply chain is a textbook example. For most of the world's industrial operators, elemental sulphur barely registers as a strategic concern, yet its absence cascades through fertiliser production, base metals refining, and agricultural systems with remarkable speed. What is unfolding across global supply chains in 2026 presents South Africa with an unusual convergence: a domestic waste problem that may simultaneously resolve a critical import dependency, making South Africa coal waste sulphuric acid production one of the most strategically relevant industrial opportunities of the moment.

Why Sulphur Became a Strategic Vulnerability Almost Overnight

Elemental Sulphur and Its Petroleum Refining Origins

Elemental sulphur occupies an unusual position in the global commodity hierarchy. It is not mined in the conventional sense by most producing nations. Instead, it is recovered as a mandatory by-product of petroleum refining, where it must be extracted from crude oil before refined products can meet emissions and quality standards. This makes sulphur supply structurally dependent on oil production volumes and, critically, on the geopolitical stability of the countries where refining capacity is concentrated.

The Gulf region, home to some of the world's largest petroleum refining operations, dominates global elemental sulphur supply. When armed conflict disrupts oil production and refining activity across that region, the downstream consequence is a contraction in sulphur availability that ripples outward through every industry relying on sulphuric acid as a feedstock or processing agent. This is precisely the dynamic that University of Cape Town (UCT) Department of Chemical Engineering researchers Dr Helene-Marie Stander and Prof Jennifer Broadhurst identified as one of the largely overlooked industrial consequences of the current Gulf conflict, as reported by Mining Weekly on 6 May 2026.

China's Export Ban: Reading the Policy Signal

When a major industrial economy moves to restrict exports of a commodity as foundational as sulphuric acid, it signals that the underlying supply disruption has reached a threshold of genuine severity. China's decision to ban sulphuric acid exports, which took effect from the beginning of May 2026, represents exactly that kind of policy signal, according to Dr Stander and Prof Broadhurst as reported in Mining Weekly.

The move illustrates a fundamental tension in industrial commodity markets: when domestic supply tightens, export restrictions are often the first instrument governments reach for, but the downstream consequences for import-dependent nations can be severe and rapid.

For countries across Sub-Saharan Africa that depend on sulphuric acid imports or on imported elemental sulphur to produce acid domestically, China's export ban removes a secondary supply option precisely at the moment when Gulf-sourced sulphur is also contracting. The timing creates a compounding vulnerability that few supply chain planners had formally stress-tested. Furthermore, mining risk management frameworks have rarely accounted for this precise combination of simultaneous supply disruptions from multiple geopolitical theatres.

South Africa's 11-Million-Tonne Dependency: Understanding the Scale

How Sulphuric Acid Underpins South Africa's Critical Industries

Sulphuric acid is one of the most widely consumed industrial chemicals on earth, and South Africa's usage reflects the country's position as both a major agricultural producer and one of the world's most significant mining jurisdictions. According to Dr Stander and Prof Broadhurst, as reported in Mining Weekly, South Africa consumes approximately 11 million tonnes per year (Mtpa) of sulphuric acid, with roughly 7 Mtpa produced domestically through sulphur combustion.

The applications span two critical sectors:

  • Fertiliser manufacturing: Sulphuric acid is the primary feedstock for phosphate-based fertilisers, which underpin South Africa's agricultural productivity and regional food security. Any sustained disruption to acid supply translates directly into fertiliser price increases and potential production shortfalls.
  • Base metals refining: Hydrometallurgical processing of copper, cobalt, and nickel, particularly across the Southern African Copperbelt spanning the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and Zambia, depends on large volumes of sulphuric acid. Regional demand from copper and cobalt expansion is projected to push Southern African acid requirements from approximately 1.2 million tpa toward 2 million tpa in coming years. In addition, critical minerals demand growth across the energy transition is accelerating this trajectory considerably.

A notable existing example of large-scale acid production within South Africa's industrial base is Anglo American Platinum's 55,000 tpa sulphuric acid plant at its Polokwane Metallurgical Complex, which produces acid through SO₂ abatement processes. This facility demonstrates that SO₂-to-acid conversion infrastructure is not theoretical within the South African context; it already operates at industrial scale.

The Import Dependency Risk Concentration

South Africa's current sulphuric acid supply architecture contains a structural vulnerability that the current geopolitical environment has brought into sharp relief:

The concentration of South Africa's elemental sulphur imports around a single primary supplier, Saudi Arabia, creates a single-point-of-failure risk that commodity markets rarely price adequately during periods of stability. As Middle East sulphur supply disruptions continue to intensify, a reduction in Gulf sulphur supply combined with increased sulphur prices could cause serious harm to both the agricultural and mining sectors, Dr Stander and Prof Broadhurst warned, as reported in Mining Weekly.

What Pyrite Is and Why Coal Waste Contains an Acid Production Opportunity

Two Types of Sulphur in South African Coal

South Africa's coal reserves contain sulphur in two distinct forms, and understanding this distinction is central to grasping the commercial opportunity:

  • Organic sulphur is chemically bonded within the carbon matrix of the coal itself. It cannot be physically separated from the coal and has no standalone industrial value as a sulphur source.
  • Mineral sulphur, present as iron pyrite (FeS₂), exists as discrete mineral particles distributed through the coal. Because pyrite is a contaminant that reduces coal quality and contributes to environmental problems, it is actively removed during coal beneficiation. At present, it is simply discarded with the coal waste stream, representing an enormous untapped resource.

This distinction matters considerably. The pyrite component in coal is rejected with coal waste during processing and can be effectively separated from the rest of the waste material, but this separation is not currently standard practice across South African collieries, according to Dr Stander and Prof Broadhurst as reported in Mining Weekly. This institutional gap, not a technical barrier, is the primary reason a substantial domestic acid production resource sits unutilised.

Pyrite can be separated from coal waste and converted into sulphuric acid using established industrial processes.

Quantifying South Africa Coal Waste Sulphuric Acid Production Potential

The Scale of the Domestic Resource

South Africa's coal sector generates a substantial waste stream that forms the raw material base for this opportunity:

  • More than 10 million tonnes of ultra-fine coal waste annually, at particle sizes below 150 μm
  • Approximately 60 million tonnes of broader coal fines arising from collieries, gasification operations, and combustion plants

A UCT study has determined that processing the country's current coal waste arisings, without any additional reprocessing of legacy stockpiles, could yield up to 800,000 tonnes per year of sulphuric acid. With targeted reprocessing of existing coal waste facilities to retrieve previously discarded pyrite, total production potential reaches 1.4 million tonnes per year, according to Dr Stander and Prof Broadhurst as reported in Mining Weekly.

Supply Gap Analysis

The strategic relevance of these figures becomes clear when mapped against South Africa's current import exposure:

The arithmetic is compelling. South Africa coal waste sulphuric acid production at full potential could substantially neutralise the exposure created by Gulf sulphur supply disruption, effectively closing the supply gap created by the Middle East conflict, as Dr Stander and Prof Broadhurst stated in Mining Weekly.

Investor Note: Production potential figures are derived from research-scale studies conducted at UCT. Commercial-scale deployment involves additional capital expenditure, permitting, and operational variables that could affect actual output. These figures should be treated as indicative of the resource scale, not guaranteed production targets.

The Environmental Case: Why Pyrite Removal Solves Multiple Problems at Once

The environmental co-benefits of pyrite recovery can be summarised as follows:

From Laboratory Validation to Commercial Scale: What Must Happen

Technical Readiness and the Remaining Deployment Gap

The core technologies underpinning South Africa coal waste sulphuric acid production are all industrially established. Froth flotation, reflux classification, pyrite roasting, and contact process acid conversion are standard industrial chemistry tools with extensive global deployment histories. UCT's Department of Chemical Engineering has validated the specific application to South African coal waste at research and pilot scale, establishing technical proof of concept for the separation methodology.

The gap between proof of concept and commercial production involves:

  1. Capital investment in separation circuits: Pyrite separation equipment must be integrated into existing coal processing facilities or constructed as standalone reprocessing plants at legacy waste sites with the highest pyrite concentrations.
  2. Roasting and acid plant infrastructure: Commercial-scale roasting furnaces, contact process reactors, and associated emissions control systems represent significant capital commitments.
  3. Offtake agreement development: Producers of coal waste-derived acid will require committed purchasers in the fertiliser and base metals sectors before financing capital-intensive infrastructure.
  4. Regulatory pathway clarity: South Africa's existing environmental legislation governing AMD, waste management, and air quality simultaneously creates compliance pressure and economic incentive for pyrite removal. Regulatory frameworks governing the classification of pyrite recovery as a waste treatment or manufacturing activity will influence project bankability.

The Broader Geopolitical Lesson for Industrial Strategy

South Africa's coal waste acid opportunity illustrates a principle that recurs throughout commodity market history: supply shocks generated by geopolitical instability frequently reveal latent domestic resource opportunities that were previously uneconomic or institutionally overlooked. The convergence of a global sulphur disruption, an established environmental liability, and a technically validated conversion pathway creates an unusually strong alignment of incentives for industrial transformation.

The energy transition mining context adds yet another layer of strategic urgency, given that sulphuric acid is central to refining many of the metals underpinning renewable energy infrastructure globally. The alignment of economic urgency, environmental obligation, and commercial viability at a single point in time is rare. Whether South Africa's coal sector, chemicals industry, and policy community can mobilise quickly enough to convert research-validated potential into operating production capacity may ultimately determine how much of this strategic window is captured.


https://discoveryalert.com.au/south-africa-coal-waste-sulphuric-acid-production-pyrite/

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