Latest News

Solway restarts Guatemala nickel plant following price surge

Solway Investment Group, a Swiss company, plans to restart nickel operations in Guatemala within months. This is after a dramatic?rise of the nickel price, and the removal of sanctions by the United States.

Analysts estimate that the amounts involved represent a tiny fraction of the global nickel supply, which is estimated to be around four million tons in this year.

Industry sources claim that the plan indicates that the prices are high enough to allow some smelters to re-start profitable production after prices fell to three-year lows at the end of 2024.

Nickel, which is also used in the production of electric vehicle batteries, reached a 19-month high on Monday at $19 160 per metric ton, according to London's Metal Exchange. Nickel prices have risen by?nearly 20 percent since Indonesia, the world's largest nickel producer, announced late last year that it would reduce its nickel mining quotas.

Solway's Guatemalan operation includes the PRONICO plant with a production capacity of 25, 000 metric tons nickel ferronickel per year and CGN mine, which can extract up to 2, 2 million tons nickel ore.

Solway stated that the anticipated timeline for re-starting CGN will be around April or May 2026. This is in line with the restart of PRONICO.

Solway shut down PRONICO and CGN in November 2022 after the U.S. imposed sanctions on its 'Guatemalan subsidiaries. The U.S. lifted them in January 2024.

According to an industry source, ferronickel trades at a discount of $2,000 per ton to the LME nickel price. Solway, which owns its mine in Guatemala would have to pay around $12,000 per ton to produce the ferronickel. (Reporting and editing by Barbara Lewis; reporting by Pratima Deai)

(source: Reuters)