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SQM, a lithium miner in Chile, has cut 5% of its workforce due to the lackluster price recovery

According to a company spokesperson and a memo sent to employees on Wednesday, the world's second largest lithium miner SQM is laying off up to 5% of their Chilean staff as they struggle with a prolonged slump in global prices.

Due to an overproduction of lithium in China, and lower-than-expected demand from electric vehicles the price has fallen nearly 90%. Some miners have been forced to cut jobs and stop expansions due to this.

SQM, who missed its first-quarter profit estimate, had previously stated that it expected weak prices throughout the first half of this year. It declined to comment about the layoffs.

Sources from the company said that the reductions - in both the lithium unit and the fertilizer unit - will not impact core operations or production guidance. The person said that SQM did not have any immediate plans to lay off more employees.

Could not determine exact number of dismissals.

SQM employed 8 344 people in Chile, and elsewhere, at the end last year. Three quarters of them worked at its operations in northern Chile, where it extracts lithium and processes it.

In a memo dated Tuesday from the Sindicato SQM Salar, the union said that the company had informed the president of the group that 25 to 30 percent of the layoffs were for "general roles" and the remainder was for supervisors. The memo stated that they would occur at SQM offices in Santiago as well as its lithium processing facility in northern Chile and the Atacama Salt Flat.

The memo stated, "As a trade union, we regret the decision made by the company that affects our members and we categorically doubt the reasons behind it." It did not provide any further details. The memo also offered to support workers who had lost their jobs.

Albemarle U.S., the sole other lithium miner operating in Chile, reduced its workforce last year to cut costs, which it claimed helped offset low lithium prices. (Reporting and writing by Fabian Cambero, Daina Beth Solon; editing by Sarah Morland Brendan O'Boyle Aurora Ellis).

(source: Reuters)