Sibanye CEO flags lack of incentives for green metals producers

Sibanye-Stillwater CEO Richard Stewart has criticised the absence of premiums or credits for producers of green metals based on their downstream environmental benefits. Speaking from the company's Keliber mine in Finland, he argued that original equipment manufacturers prioritise the cheapest options over cleaner ones without regulatory incentives. Stewart called for industry-wide metrics to reward such benefits across the value chain.

Richard Stewart, CEO of Sibanye-Stillwater, stated in an interview with Daily Maverick that incentives for green metals remain limited. He compared the situation to premiums paid for free-range eggs at Woolworths due to ethical concerns, noting no equivalent exists for low-carbon mining products.

"If you took, for example, lithium hydroxide, whether it’s produced in Finland using renewable energy with very little transport footprint or if it’s produced in China, the OEMs have no incentive to buy the cleaner option," Stewart said. "They will buy the cheapest or the most available."

Stewart made these remarks during a visit to the Keliber mine, Europe's only lithium mine, which runs mostly on renewable energy. Lithium is essential for batteries in electric vehicles and solar storage. He advocated for credits beyond traditional scope 1, 2, and 3 emissions, considering full value chain impacts.

As an example, he cited platinum group metals (PGMs), which Sibanye produces in South Africa for autocatalysts that curb harmful exhaust gases. "If you produce PGMs that go into autocats that reduce emissions by X, you can come up with a metric... you can get a credit of X," Stewart explained.

While the EU's carbon border adjustment mechanism (CBAM) tariffs carbon-intensive imports and Australia offers grants for green iron, fossil fuel subsidies reached $7 trillion globally in 2022 according to the IMF. Stewart urged standardisation to incentivise cleaner production amid the energy transition.

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Foreign investors Florentino Pérez and Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada at a German raw materials mine, with economists calling for EU export controls.
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Prominent investors target German raw materials

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Foreign investors like Real Madrid president Florentino Pérez and former Bolivian president Gonzalo Sánchez de Lozada are involved in extracting critical raw materials in Germany. Despite the boom, there are no rules ensuring the resources benefit the EU economy. Economists call for greater state control over exports.

Sibanye-Stillwater's Keliber lithium project in Finland has entered production after three years of construction costing over €780 million. The site produces Europe's first domestic battery-grade lithium hydroxide for electric vehicle batteries. CEO Richard Stewart highlighted the company's strategic focus on battery metals during a presentation in Helsinki on April 20, 2026.

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South Africa's platinum group metals sector has seen a strong rebound, with surging prices leading to higher profits, dividends, and taxes for the National Treasury. This revival follows a European Commission decision to ease restrictions on internal combustion engine vehicles. The development provides relief amid concerns over electric vehicle adoption.

MTN aims to acquire full control of IHS Towers in Africa through a cash deal worth R35bn to R40bn. Sibanye-Stillwater released its annual mineral resources update, showing stable PGMs but reduced gold reserves. ASP Isotopes is relocating its Quantum Leap Energy unit to Austin, Texas, to advance nuclear fuel production.

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At the Southern Africa Oil and Gas Conference in Cape Town, Minister Gwede Mantashe urged harnessing South Africa's oil and gas resources amid disruptions from the US-Israeli war on Iran. He stressed legislative urgency to avoid litigation delays. Industry leaders echoed calls for diversified energy portfolios.

SSAB is making a billion-krona investment in its Borlänge operations to boost steel production capacity by 150,000 tonnes per year. The move comes amid global uncertainties and new US tariffs. No major new hirings are planned.

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Peace has returned to the eastern section of South Africa's platinum belt in Mpumalanga and Limpopo, thanks to a multipronged strategy of policing, community engagement, and joint development projects. This stability has eliminated production losses at mines like Northam Platinum's Booysendal for three years and boosted investment confidence. The approach serves as a model for other mining regions amid rising platinum group metals prices.

 

 

 

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