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Ukrainian graphite mine hopes Trump deal but says returns won't come instantly

Ostap Kostyuk, the CEO of the 90-year-old Zavallivsky Graphite mine in central Ukraine, dreams of producing graphite that is pure enough to be used for lithium batteries. He compares this to trying to make a Rolls-Royce "inside a garage" due to the lack of investment.

Kostyuk is sitting on Europe's largest deposit of graphite. He sees an opportunity, but admits that profits won't come fast for American investors.

Kostyuk said that the challenges of extracting minerals from Ukraine are a long-term commitment.

He showed me the vast facility in Kirovohrad, where he was standing in front of old heavy machinery, and every surface had a thin coating of graphite, which rubbed away when touched.

The vast mineral wealth of Ukraine's undersoil is the core of the joint partnership pitch that President Volodymyr Zelenskiy made to Trump. He wants security guarantees in a deal ending the war.

In response, Trump has said that he wants $500 Billion worth of Ukrainian resources. He sent his Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent this week to Kyiv in order to meet Zelenskiy.

Mineral Wealth

In an interview with Zelenskiy last week, he unfurled a list of Ukrainian minerals. These include lithium, graphite and titanium, all of which are essential for manufacturing high-performance magnets as well as electric motors and consumer electronic products.

He stated that less than 20% (including about half of its rare earth deposits) were under Russian occupation, and emphasized the need to protect what is left.

Industry experts warn that despite the trillions of dollars in mineral wealth Kyiv claims to have untapped, it may take many years before investors see significant returns from a sector still reeling from chronic underinvestment and war.

Volodymyr Landa, senior economist at Centre for Economic Strategy said that it was crucial to know what the United States were interested in.

Ksenia Orynchak is the head of Kyiv’s National Extractive Industries Association. She said that the mining industry has "stagnated", and there have been no inflows of funds for the nine years in which she worked.

She said that at the State Service of Geology where she worked between 2017 and 2019, the government allocated only a few millions hryvnias for all of the organization's activities. At a time, simple geological exploration costs 2 billion hryvnias (48 million dollars).

Orynchak also said that Ukraine's mineral resources have been classified since more than 20 years, which makes it impossible to accurately estimate what Ukraine has.

MACHINERY FROM THE SOVIET ERA

The Soviet-era Zavallivsky Complex, whose equipment had last been modernised in 1965 illustrates the magnitude of the challenge.

The mine, though hundreds of miles away from the front line, has been in desperate need of resources ever since the full-scale Russian invasion in February 2022 prompted the Australian partner to withdraw its funding.

Several of Kostyuk’s employees are either in the military, or have died fighting for Ukraine.

He said that despite the setbacks his plant was already producing a product which could be purified later into battery-ready SPG (spherical spherical Graphite).

Kostyuk said, "We're ready for this technology." His facility's ultimate goal is to produce its own SPG.

The graphite reserves in Ukraine, which are used to make electric vehicles batteries and nuclear power reactors, account for 20% of the global resource.

He said that his company is ready to supply U.S. consumers with natural flake graphite in order to establish a Ukrainian name on U.S. market, as well as to search for new deposits of the material in Ukraine.

He added that new digging projects, whether they are for graphite or any other important minerals, could take between five and seven years to begin producing.

Kostyuk says that his factory desperately needs to be upgraded, but his workers have the knowledge and skills to make a big leap if they are given the right resources.

He said, "I believe in the factory and in these people." "Everyone here wants to be at work." ($1 = 41.8330 hryvnias). (Editing by Tom Balmforth, Alex Richardson and Tom Balmforth)

(source: Reuters)