Lead Demand Growth in India Is Twice Global Pace, Recycler Gravita Says

Lead demand in India is expanding by 10 percent to 12 percent a year, about twice the global rate, on increased battery sales and infrastructure projects, according to recycler Gravita India Ltd.

“There is a good expansion in the automobile, telecom and power sector,” Navin Sharma, marketing vice president, said from Jaipur. The company’s sales were about 50 percent higher over the first three quarters of this fiscal year compared with a year earlier, Sharma said yesterday by phone.

Metals demand in the second-most populous nation may gain 80 percent in the next five years, Barclays Capital forecast in a report last November, saying commodity consumption has reached a “tipping point.” Lead futures on the London Metal Exchange have gained about 11 percent over the past year.

“Car sales is the big driver,” Sharma said. “There is a shortage of power, so all batteries for the office backup as well home backup, the inverters, will also be a good driver.”

Three-month lead futures traded at $2,538 per metric ton on the LME at 11:29 a.m. in Singapore. The price more than doubled in 2009 as the global economy emerged from recession, and increased a further 4.9 percent in 2010.

Lead should remain “firm” in 2011, trading between $2,300 and $2,800 a ton, Sharma said. LME lead futures peaked this year at $2,712.75 a ton on Jan. 6, the highest level since 2008, when they surged to $3,480 a ton.

Annual Demand

Annual lead demand in India is about 500,000 tons, with about half of that total met through recycling, Sharma said. Gravita India produces about 20,000 tons of the metal domestically a year, he said.

China, the world’s largest metal consumer, used about 4 million tons of refined lead in 2010, up 3.9 percent from a year earlier, according to data from the International Lead and Zinc Study Group.

India’s government estimates annual vehicle sales may double to 3 million by 2015, helped by rising incomes and the creation of new jobs. Prime Minister Manmohan Singh plans to double spending on roads, ports and power plants to $1 trillion in the five years to 2017 to improve infrastructure.

“We foresee good demand in the future also because of infrastructure and power projects,” said Sharma.

India’s economy may expand more than China’s in the next 10 years if investment curbs are lifted and there’s increased spending on roads and bridges, according to a forecast last month from New York University professor Nouriel Roubini.

The South Asian country’s gross domestic product climbed 8.9 percent for a second straight quarter in the July-to- September period, according to government figures. China’s economy expanded 10.3 percent in 2010, the fastest pace in three years, the statistics bureau said in a report

Global refined lead and zinc metal market in surplus

The International Lead and Zinc Study Group (ILZSG) released preliminary data for world lead and zinc supply and demand during the first eleven months of 2010. Preliminary data indicate the global refined lead metal market in surplus, an exceeded demand in world supply of refined zinc metal and an increase in total reported stock levels. Full details are available in the January 2011 edition of the Group’s 68 page ‘Lead and Zinc Statistics’ Bulletin (for members) under ilzsg.org

Lead

* Preliminary data compiled by the ILZSG for the first eleven months of 2011 indicate that the global refined lead metal market was in surplus by 41kt (kiloton) and that, over the same period, total reported inventory levels increased by 53kt.
* A rise in world lead mine production of 7.8 percent, compared to the first eleven months of 2010, was primarily influenced by increased production in Australia, China, India, Mexico and the Russian Federation which more than offset declines in Ireland, Peru and the United States.
* Global production of refined lead metal rose by 5.8 percent. This was mainly due to further growth in Chinese output.
* The main drivers behind a rise in world demand for refined lead metal of 6.3 percent were an increase in Chinese apparent usage of 8.2 percent and recoveries in Europe and Japan after sharp reductions in 2009.

Zinc

* According to the most recent information available to the ILZSG, world supply of refined zinc metal exceeded demand by 223kt over the period January to November 2011. Over the same period, after having taken into account 50kt of refined zinc released by the Chinese State Reserve Bureau in November, total reported stock levels increased by 201kt.
* Global global refined lead metal market was in surplusby 9.7 percent compared to the first eleven months of 2010. This was primarily due to higher output in Australia, China, Mexico and the Russian Federation.
* Increases in Belgium, Brazil, Peru, China, India, the United States and a number of other countries resulted in an overall global rise in world refined zinc metal production of 14.5 percent.
* The principal influences on an increase in world usage of refined zinc metal of 16.7 percent were strong recoveries in demand in Europe, Japan and the Republic of Korea together with further growth in Chinese apparent demand of 14.9 percent.

The 2011 edition of the ILZSG ‘Lead and Zinc New Mine and Smelter Projects’ report, with details of more than 200 lead and zinc projects, is now available under ilzsg.org.
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