NiWest: the Australian mine looking to defy the nickel downturn

(Mining Technology, London, 19 February 2025) Alliance Nickel is advancing its NiWest Nickel-Cobalt Project in Western Australia, which could produce 20,000 tonnes of nickel annually over the first 12 years. Despite a challenging nickel market, the project’s definitive feasibility study shows it has the potential to deliver low-cost, high-quality outputs. The project is set to become a key player in Australia’s nickel industry, with environmental and economic sustainability at its core. Alliance Nickel is engaging with Export Finance Australia, the Canadian export credit agency (ECA), Samsung and South Korean ECAs.

Meteoric maintains Caldeira momentum in bid to build low cost rare earths monster

Stockhead, Perth, |24 February) Meteoric Resources continues advancing its Caldeira project in Brazil, projecting industry-leading low operating costs and high potential returns. Despite a dip in share price, the company plans to finalize its pre-feasibility study soon and aims for production by 2027. Strategic partnerships, including agreements with U.S. and Canadian ECAs, are key to securing future funding.

EXIM Hosts Export Finance Australia, Highlighting Strong Partnership

(EXIM, Washington, 25 February 2025) The Export-Import Bank of the U.S. hosted Export Finance Australia to discuss enhancing their collaboration on critical minerals and supply chain shifts away from China. Both agencies plan to leverage the Single Point of Entry (SPE) initiative for streamlined financing and mutual strategic priorities.

Queensland goes global to attract investment

(Australia Mining, Victoria, 27 February 2025) Queensland Government Boosts Resources Investment with $10 Million Funding Initiative. The program aims to enhance exploration and development in the mining sector, supporting job creation and economic growth. This funding is part of a broader strategy to attract investment and foster innovation in Queensland’s resource industry.

U.S. Misses the Mark on ECA Fossil Fuel Finance Agreement

(Friends of the Earth, Washington, 21 November 2024) Today at the conclusion of the OECD Export Credit Group negotiations, participating nations failed to reach an agreement on fossil fuel finance, despite scientists’ repeated calls for urgent climate action. While no formal conclusion has been announced from the talks, the United States appears to have failed to secure an agreement. The proposal has already been championed by the European Union, UK, Canada, Norway and most recently, Australia. It would have potentially restricted financing for the entire fossil fuel value chain. Up to $40 billion per year could be shifted away from fossil fuels to renewable energy projects. This would have paved the way for the agreement to be presented as part of a climate finance package at COP29. Unlike the Paris Agreement, it would have been difficult for the Trump Administration to remove itself from just one piece of the arrangement.

AGA seeks to raise USD 6.5bn for major Aussie green ammonia project

(Renewables Now, 13 September 2024) Allied Green Ammonia Pty Ltd has hired Affinity Capital Group as a lead manager and strategic financial adviser to help it raise about USD 6.5 billion (EUR 5.90bn) for the development and construction of a large-scale green hydrogen and ammonia facility in the Northern Territory of Australia. The company is currently in negotiations for preapproval for about 70% of the engineering, procurement and construction contract value from the Spanish Government Export Credit Agency CESCE.

Critical Minerals Security Partnership may not be enough for Australia

(Australian Strategic Policy Institute, Canberra, 25 September 2024) Fourteen countries this week took what they intended to be a big step in countering China’s dominance of critical minerals supply. But it’s unclear whether the initiative will restore competitiveness of Australian production and investment in the face of massive subsidies offered by China and, in response, the United States. The Minerals Security Partnership, a coalition of 14 countries, including the G7, Australia, India, South Korea, and European Union members, announced plans for a finance network to boost investment in critical metals. The initiative will tap into domestic export credit agencies and development finance institutions to attract private sector capital to produce, extract, process and recycle critical minerals, especially in riskier markets. The partnership seeks to lower investment risks and drive global supply chain resilience by providing guarantees and concessional financing. Australia’s economic prosperity and national security are intrinsically linked to the exploitation of its abundant resources, notably critical minerals. These minerals are the new oil. They’re the building blocks for everything from emerging technology to energy transition. Although Australia has vast reserves, its critical mineral mining and processing are still threatened by the intense subsidy war between the US and China.

Campaigners Increasingly Targeting Financial Backers with Lawsuits Against Fossil Fuel Funders

(DeSmog, Seattle, 26 June 2024) Campaigners are increasingly taking out lawsuits against the funders of fossil fuels and other climate-harming activities, according to a new report. In its annual review of climate litigation, published June 26, the London School of Economics and Political Science’s (LSE) Grantham Research Institute on Climate Change and the Environment identifies a modest but growing number of lawsuits challenging the flow of finance to projects that worsen climate change. In total, 33 cases that challenge the flow of funding have been recorded since academics began keeping track nine years ago. Six were filed in 2023. In one significant recent case, human rights and environmental NGO Jubilee Australia challenged Australia’s export credit agency Export Finance Australia and the $7 billion AUD Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility for giving taxpayer-subsidized finance to risky new fossil fuel projects and related ventures that would otherwise not go ahead. Jubilee Australia wants to force the public bodies involved to disclose impact assessments for these investments. French bank BNP Paribas also recently said it would stop funding new gas projects as the risk of litigation rises. Campaigners, including Oxfam France, had sued the bank for financing fossil fuels in the first-ever climate-related lawsuit against a commercial bank. However, activists noted that BNP cut out direct loans, and it still supports oil and gas through indirect loans to other involved companies and by underwriting bonds. A previous claim from 2020 against Australian banking group ANZ confirmed that climate change was relevant to responsible business practices under the OECD guidelines, but the organization did not require companies to divest from fossil fuels. The OECD guidelines are just one example of “soft law” – agreements that are influential but not legally binding – groups use to try to push corporations and their funders in a greener direction.

JBIC fires up US$1bn loan for Australian LNG project

(Global Trade Review, London, 4 June 2024) Perth-headquartered Woodside Energy has secured a US$1.45bn loan package from Japan’s export credit agency and a group of private lenders, backing an LNG development off the Australian coast. As part of the deal, the Japan Bank for International Cooperation (JBIC) is providing a US$1bn loan that Woodside will use for its Scarborough Energy Project, which is slated to start delivering LNG by 2026. The facility will ensure a long-term and stable supply of LNG for Japan, says JBIC in a statement.

Export credit and West vs Chinese strategic minerals

(Mining News, Perth, 19 June 2024) Australian Strategic Materials (ASM) is aiming to become the first global company to go from rare earths mining all the way through to metals. Rare earths are considered critical minerals and demand is set to surge, making ASX-listed ASM well-placed to capitalise as it holds holds one of the country’s most advanced rare earth element deposits, the Dubbo Project, in New South Wales. ASM made significant headway in this area when it recently received non-binding letters of interest from the Export-Import Bank of the United States (US EXIM) for up to US$600 million, and up to A$400 million from Export Development Canada (EDC) in debt financing for the Dubbo Project, in addition to conditional finance support of A$200 million previously received from Export Finance Australia. Interest from US and Canadian agencies stems from enhanced policy alignment between Australia and North American jurisdictions on the importance of establishing an alternative critical minerals supply chain. “They needed a non-China source of material, so for us, being an early leader in it means we’re now in this process where we’re validating our product with all of them to qualify to be a supplier,” ASM Director Rowena SmithSmith said.