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Nornickel, a Russian nickel producer, will shift some of its nickel production to a copper plant for repairs.

Nornickel, a Russian nickel producer, will shift some of its nickel production to a copper plant for repairs.
Nornickel, a Russian nickel producer, will shift some of its nickel production to a copper plant for repairs.

A company vice president revealed that Russian metals producer Nornickel plans to begin 'experimental nickel melting' at its copper plant this year in order to maintain production during the major furnace reconstruction planned for 2027.

This innovative approach will enable the company to maintain nickel production throughout the renovation.

Alexander Leonov told Norilsk TV that Nornickel plans to upgrade the smelting?furnace at the Nadezhda Metallurgical Plant, in the Arctic city Norilsk, in 2027.

He said that the shutdown would last approximately 270 days and remove about half of the plant’s capacity.

Leonov stated that Nornickel will convert a part of its copper facility to produce nickel instead of copper to offset the outage. This is an "unconventional" solution. The company has begun preparing its production lines to make the switch. It hopes to begin industrial pilot tests in this year.

Nornickel stated in 2024 it would?close its Arctic Copper plant and move the copper production to China mid-2027. According to a participant on a conference call with the company, talks are underway with Chinese partners.

The company expects nickel production to be between 193,000 and 203,000 metric tonnes in 2026. This is roughly the same as 2025. The?company expects palladium production to be between 2.415 - 2.465 million pounds, down up to 11% from last year.

Nornickel CEO and main shareholder?Vladimir Potanin said previously that recent 'production declines were temporary. He cited depleted ore reserves, switching to non-Western suppliers, and the loss some markets. Potanin expects the output to stabilize by 2028. (Reporting by Anastasia Lyrchikova. (Editing by Vladimir Soldatkin, Mark Potter and Mark Potter.)

(source: Reuters)