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Australia's IGO lowers its capex forecast for Greenbushes Lithium mine in Western Australia

IGO Ltd, a company based in Australia, announced on Wednesday it would reduce its capital expenditure forecasts for fiscal 2025 at its Greenbushes Lithium mine in Western Australia.

The miner expects to spend between A$700 and A$800 millions, a reduction from the previous range of A$850 to A$950 for fiscal 2025.

IGO announced that it would lower its forecast after a review of and optimization of the portfolio for project capital.

Greenbushes Lithium Mine is owned in large part by IGO, its Chinese joint venture partner Tianqi Lithium and U.S.-based Albemarle Corp.

Greenbushes, Western Australia’s longest continuously operating mining area, produced 341 kilometric tons of spodumene in the third quarter. This was a drop of 13% from the previous quarter.

The miner said last year that the lithium market was troubling his firm, with the spodumene and lithium carbonate prices dropping by as much as 70% in fiscal 2024.

After a 90 percent drop in lithium prices in the past two years, some mines producing the metal, which is used to make batteries for electric vehicles, have curtailed their operations or delayed expansions. Other mines, however, that are losing money, have continued production, in part because of the support they receive from Chinese battery manufacturers.

In early this year, Tianqi Lithium and the miner agreed to stop all work at one of their lithium hydroxide facilities in Western Australia.

IGO has decided to stop operations at its lithium hydroxide facility in Kwinana. This decision follows IGO's prior write-downs of its nickel operations. These have led to a strategic review that reassesses its resources, amid an oversupply on the global nickel market which drove down prices last year.

Separately the miner reported underlying earnings before taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA), which was A$34m for the third quarter. This is a significant improvement from the EBITDA loss last quarter of A$79m.

As of 0058 GMT the shares of the company had fallen nearly 1.9%, while the mining index as a whole fell 0.4%.

(source: Reuters)