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PLS, an Australian lithium miner, rises after a deal to supply spodumene with China's Canmax

PLS Group announced on Tuesday it had?signed a 2-year offtake contract to supply 150,000 tonnes of spodumene to Chinese lithium-battery materials maker Canmax Technologies,? sending shares of the Australian miner higher.

If gains continue, shares of the lithium mining company could reach their highest trading session since 6 January if they hold. The stock is among the best performers of the ASX 200, which rose 0.3%.

PLS, previously Pilbara Minerals said that the parties had agreed on a price floor of $1,000 per ton based upon spodumene concentration containing 6% Lithium (SC6). This semi-processed product is derived by separating lithium bearing minerals from ore.

The miner stated that the structure provides downside protection during volatile conditions, while maintaining full exposure to price increases.

The lithium demand outlook for this year has been boosted by a boom in battery storage. This is encouraging for producers who have struggled with a?slump' in prices due to oversupply since late 2022.

PLS's quarterly production report from last month indicated that its?Ngungaju facility in Western Australia could be restarted due to strong interest in offtake volume. A decision is expected within the next quarter.

PLS announced that the agreement for spodumene, which is used to produce lithium chemicals for 'electric vehicle batteries,' will begin in 2026. It also includes an option to extend it for another 12 months.

The miner said that the agreement is "conditional" on receiving a prepayment of $100 million in unsecured debt, free of interest.

Canmax's latest lithium offtake agreement follows an agreement reached in December with Australian miner Liontown.

(source: Reuters)