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Sibanye CEO: Sibanye committed to battery metals even though lithium is impaired

Richard Stewart, CEO of Sibanye Stillwater, said that the company is committed to its 'battery metals' business. This comes after an impairment of another 2.46 billion rand (about $152.6 million) on its Keliber Lithium project in Finland.

In recent years, the South African miner has acquired zinc, nickel, and lithium assets as part of a shift to metals that are used in renewable energy technologies.

Sibanye recorded a total impairment of 7,8 billion rands at Keliber by 2025. The company cited a "dim outlook for long-term prices of lithium hydroxide". The asset is currently valued at around 9 billion rand by the company.

The company cancelled its plans to invest in the Rhyolite Ridge Lithium project in the United States in February 2025. After the?metal price dropped.

Stewart stated during a call to discuss results that "our long-term strategic goal as a business is to continue to provide metals to support the decarbonisation of our planet and energy transition".

PRODUCTION PHASED

Sibanye will phase-in production at Keliber starting with spodumene, and then consider producing battery-grade lithium hydroxide at a later date, depending on price.

Stewart stated that the European Union's and U.S.'s initiatives to reduce their reliance on China as a source of battery metals provide an incentive for Keliber.

He said, "We believe this will have an impact on the final pricing layout in time."

Sibanye announced on Friday that its headline earnings for 2025 were 2.44 rand per share, compared to 0.64 rand in the previous year. This was boosted by higher prices of gold and platinum group materials. This helped the diversified miner announce its first dividend since 2023.

The average South African PGM price rose by 28% and the rand price increased by 39%.

(source: Reuters)