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Mining and marketing company Glencore
produced 40% more cobalt last year, along with 16% more oil, 5% more nickel and
1% more ferrochrome.
Although coal production of 110-million
tonnes was 6.7-million tonnes higher, on a like-for-like basis, overall group
coal production fell by 7%, primarily owing to wet weather challenges and an
extended community blockade in Colombia, where Glencore now owns 100% of
Cerrejón.
Following the restart of the Mutanda mine
in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the London- and Johannesburg-listed
company last year produced 43 800 t of cobalt, 12 500 t more than in 2021.
Entitlement interest oil production of
6.1-million barrels of oil equivalent was 0.9-million barrels higher than 2021
on a full year’s production from the Alen gas project in Equatorial Guinea.
Own sourced nickel output of 107 500 t was
5 200 t higher than 2021 on Koniambo mine in New Caledonia running two
production lines for most of 2022 and the absence of a maintenance shut at
Australia’s Murrin Murrin, which was partially offset by lower production at
INO caused by strike action in Canada and Norway.
Attributable ferrochrome production of 1
488 000 t was 1% up on that of 2021.
Copper production of 1 058 100 t was 12%
down on 2021, owing to the sale of Ernest Henry mine in Australia, ongoing
geotechnical constraints at Katanga in the DRC, planned mining sequence changes
at Collahuasi in Chile, and a lower contribution from Mount Isa in Australia.
Zinc production of 938 500 t was 16% lower
on the disposal or cessation of South America operations, closure of Matagami
mine in Canada, and lower volumes from Mount Isa as Lady Loretta approaches the
end of its mine life.
“Overall, 2022 production volumes were in
line with our revised guidance from October 2022, with final quarter sequential
production increases delivered across most of our key commodities, including
copper, zinc, nickel and coal,” Glencore CEO Gary Nagle stated in a release to
Mining Weekly.
“During the year, however, we saw a mixed
overall production performance. Copper and zinc volumes reflect the base effect
of asset sales, notably Ernest Henry and Bolivia, Katanga’s geotechnical
constraints and supply chain headwinds in Kazakhstan.
“Nickel volumes benefitted from operating
two lines at Koniambo for the majority of the year, partially offset by
Canadian industrial action.
“Overall coal volumes rose during the year
with the acquisition, in January 2022, of the balance of Cerrejón that we did
not already own, however, on a like-for-like basis, group production actually
declined by almost nine-million tonnes (7%), primarily due to abnormally wet
weather,” Nagle added.
REALISED COAL PRICING
The average Newcastle coal settlement
prices for 2022 was $360/t. After applying a portfolio mix adjustment of $115/t
to reflect, for example, movements in the pricing of non-Newcastle quality
coals, coking coal margins and the lag effect of 2021’s fixed-price contracts,
an average thermal-equivalent realised price of about $245/t can be applied
across all coal sales volumes, Glencore stated.
“Realised coal prices were higher than our
forecast,” Barclays Equity Research stated in a note.
Fourth-quarter production beat the forecast
of Morgan Stanley Research as well as its consensus estimates across coal,
copper and zinc by 5% to 8%.
“We expect shares to outperform peers on
the back of today's results,” Morgan Stanley added in a note.