Eramet
Eramet S.A. is a French multinational mining and metallurgical company founded in 1880 as Société Le Nickel for nickel extraction in New Caledonia, evolving into a key producer of manganese, nickel, mineral sands, and lithium essential for energy transition technologies and infrastructure.[1][2]
The group operates 16 industrial and mining sites across 16 countries, with flagship assets including the world's leading high-grade manganese ore mine in Gabon and the largest nickel mine by volume in Indonesia, alongside recent entry into lithium via direct extraction in Argentina's Centenario-Ratones project, which commenced production in 2024.[1][3][4]
Eramet emphasizes responsible mining, positioning itself as a supplier of critical metals while achieving milestones such as becoming Europe's first lithium producer through innovative processes, though it maintains no involvement in deep-sea mining.[1][5]
Notable controversies include environmental degradation and indigenous rights concerns at its Indonesian PT Weda Bay Nickel operations, involving deforestation, pollution, and data irregularities, prompting divestments like BASF's withdrawal from a joint project and exclusion by Norway's sovereign wealth fund in 2025 over ethical violations.[6][7][8] In New Caledonia, its Société Le Nickel subsidiary has faced operational halts and financial disputes with local authorities, exacerbated by regional unrest, requiring government interventions to sustain activities.[9][10]
History
Origins and Formation
The Compagnie Minière de l'Ogooué (Comilog) was established in 1953 as a joint venture to develop high-grade manganese ore deposits in Moanda, Gabon, marking a foundational step in what would become Eramet's core resource extraction activities.[11] This initiative involved a consortium that included a wholly owned subsidiary of the French government and the US Steel Corporation, which held a 49% stake, reflecting French state influence in securing strategic mineral supplies from colonial territories.[12] The venture targeted reserves essential for ferroalloy production, driven by postwar industrial demand for manganese to enhance steel durability in reconstruction efforts across Europe and beyond. Comilog's early operations focused on exploiting Gabon's rich manganese seams, with initial exploration confirming viable deposits suitable for export-oriented mining.[2] Concurrently, French metallurgical interests, under state oversight, initiated ferroalloy processing facilities in the 1950s to refine imported manganese ore into alloys for the steel industry, laying the groundwork for integrated mining-to-metallurgy chains.[13] These efforts capitalized on manganese's critical role in alloying agents, where empirical metallurgical data demonstrated its necessity for improving steel's tensile strength and corrosion resistance amid booming postwar manufacturing. Eramet emerged as a unified entity in 1985 through the consolidation of French state-controlled mining and metallurgical assets, including Comilog's manganese operations and longstanding nickel interests tracing to Société Le Nickel (founded 1880 in New Caledonia).[2][13] This merger formalized the group's structure, prioritizing resource extraction from high-grade deposits under national strategic imperatives, while divesting from less viable colonial-era concessions.Post-War Expansion and Diversification
Following the end of World War II, Société Le Nickel (SLN), the core of what would become Eramet's nickel operations, pursued expansion in New Caledonia to capitalize on postwar industrial demand for nickel in alloys and stainless steel production. In the late 1960s, the entity serving as parent for the Rothschild family's mining interests—including SLN—consolidated control over diverse mineral assets, enabling scaled development of mining and initial processing facilities amid rising global metal needs.[14] By 1969, the French government classified nickel as a strategic material, culminating in the nationalization of SLN in 1974 to secure domestic supply amid international market volatility.[15] This led to the restructuring of SLN into Société Nouvelle Le Nickel, jointly owned 50% by Elf Aquitaine—a state-influenced oil major—and 50% by Imétal, the rebranded former Le Nickel entity focused on non-nickel diversification.[16] The move reflected market-driven imperatives to integrate upstream mining with downstream metallurgy while maintaining operational continuity in New Caledonia's oxide deposits. Diversification accelerated geographically into Africa, building on earlier manganese ventures like the 1953 establishment of Comilog's Moanda mine in Gabon, with 1960s-1970s investments enhancing ore extraction and transport infrastructure to supply European ferroalloy plants.[2] State oversight under Elf Aquitaine intensified in 1983 when ERAP, its affiliated entity, acquired a 70% controlling stake in the reorganized nickel operations, prioritizing efficiency amid fluctuating commodity prices.[15] This period marked a shift toward balanced portfolios across nickel and manganese, reducing reliance on single markets through targeted acquisitions and facility upgrades rather than broad speculation. Partial privatization in the late 1980s diluted state holdings, fostering private investment in processing expansions.[15]Modern Restructuring and Energy Transition Focus
In response to nickel price volatility following the 2008 global financial crisis, Eramet implemented deeper cost reduction measures and enhanced operational discipline to navigate the metal market downturn, prioritizing resilience in its core alloying metals and high-growth segments.[17] This period marked a shift toward focusing on high-value-added alloys and scarce metals with strategic potential, divesting non-core activities to streamline operations amid prolonged market pressures.[18] Entering the 2020s, Eramet accelerated its pivot to critical minerals supporting the energy transition, exemplified by the Centenario-Ratones lithium project in Argentina's Salta Province. The project, utilizing direct lithium extraction technology, inaugurated its Phase 1 plant in July 2024 with a nominal capacity of 24,000 tonnes of battery-grade lithium carbonate equivalent per year; initial production commenced in December 2024, with full ramp-up targeted for mid-2025.[19][20] In October 2024, Eramet reacquired full ownership by purchasing Tsingshan Holding Group's 49.9% stake for $699 million, consolidating control over this asset integral to battery supply chains.[21] Complementing lithium, Eramet's strategy underscores nickel's utility in electric vehicle batteries and renewable infrastructure, such as offshore wind turbines, with production targets elevated for 2025 to secure feedstock for high-pressure acid leach processing amid rising EV demand.[22][23] In Gabon, manganese operations at the Moanda mine stabilized after 2020 disruptions, including the Okouma Plateau extension opened late that year, enabling output of approximately 7 million tonnes in 2021 and positioning it as one of the world's largest high-grade ore producers.[24][25] Facing persistent market headwinds in 2024 and 2025, Eramet emphasized operational efficiency through productivity levers rather than volume expansion, as articulated in mid-2025 announcements prioritizing cost controls and performance optimization across its portfolio.[26][27]Business Operations
Manganese Production and Alloys
Eramet's manganese operations primarily revolve around the extraction of high-grade ore at the Moanda mine in Gabon, operated through its majority-owned subsidiary Comilog, which produced and sold 5.5 million tonnes of ore in 2024 despite logistical challenges and market oversupply.[28] This ore, characterized by manganese content exceeding 40%, is mined via open-pit methods and processed on-site into fines, lumps, and chips suitable for export, primarily to alloy producers in Asia, Europe, and the Americas.[25] The operation positions Eramet as the world's largest producer of high-grade manganese ore, leveraging reserves that represent about 25% of global identified high-grade deposits.[29] Downstream, Eramet refines portions of this ore into manganese alloys at metallurgical plants, including the Comilog Dunkerque facility in France, which specializes in silicomanganese production using Gabonese ore as feedstock.[30] Silicomanganese, an alloy combining manganese, silicon, and iron, is produced via carbothermic reduction in submerged arc furnaces, yielding 632,000 tonnes of alloys sold group-wide in 2024, with Dunkirk contributing through restarted furnaces post-refurbishment.[28] This alloy serves as a deoxidizer and desulfurizer in steelmaking, essential for stainless and high-strength steels, where manganese enhances tensile strength and corrosion resistance.[31] Additionally, high-purity manganese products derived from the ore feed into electrolytic manganese dioxide (EMD) manufacturing, either directly or via subsidiaries like Guangxi Eramet Comilog Chemicals, where ore is electrolyzed in acidic solutions to produce EMD for alkaline and lithium-ion batteries.[32] Eramet ranks as the second-largest global producer of manganese alloys, supplying materials critical to the steel sector—which consumes over 90% of manganese output—and the burgeoning battery market, amid efforts to reduce carbon intensity through process optimizations like eraLow low-carbon silicomanganese.[31] Production resilience in 2024, despite a 9% global ore output decline to 18.8 million tonnes of contained manganese, underscores the operation's efficiency, though vulnerability to Chinese demand fluctuations and Gabonese policy shifts persists.[33]Nickel and Cobalt Mining
Eramet's nickel and cobalt operations primarily involve the extraction and initial processing of lateritic ores at two key sites, supplying materials critical to the energy storage sector through high-purity nickel derivatives. At Weda Bay in Indonesia, the company mines high-volume laterite ores, which are characterized by lower nickel grades (typically 1.3-1.8% Ni) but significant cobalt content (around 0.1-0.15% Co), making them suitable for hydrometallurgical processing into battery precursors. These ores are directed toward high-pressure acid leach (HPAL) facilities in the Weda Bay Industrial Park, where sulfuric acid under elevated temperatures and pressures extracts nickel and cobalt, yielding mixed hydroxide precipitate (MHP) for electric vehicle (EV) cathodes; this process achieves nickel recoveries of 90-95% under optimal conditions, though it contends with challenges such as ore variability leading to inconsistent leach efficiencies and precipitation selectivity issues between nickel and impurities like magnesium.[34][35] In 2024, Weda Bay produced 30.3 million wet metric tons of marketable nickel ore, supporting downstream HPAL operations that contribute to approximately 15% of global battery-grade nickel output from the park's facilities. For 2025, production targets have been raised to 42 million tons of ore, reflecting expanded permits and new mining sites amid efforts to meet rising EV demand, despite headwinds from permitting constraints and fluctuating ore grades that necessitate blending for consistent feed quality to processors. Cobalt emerges as a valuable byproduct in the HPAL route, with typical yields of 4-5 tons per 100 tons of nickel, enhancing the site's role in securing dual-metal supply for lithium-ion batteries.[36][37][38] At Société Le Nickel (SLN) in New Caledonia, operations focus on saprolite ores—silicate-rich lower layers of laterite profiles with higher nickel grades (2-3% Ni) and lower cobalt—extracted from four mining centers and processed pyrometallurgically into ferronickel via smelting at the Doniambo plant. This involves drying, calcining, and reduction in rotary kilns followed by electric furnace smelting, producing an alloy with 20-30% nickel content suitable for stainless steel but adaptable for higher-purity refining; efficiencies are impacted by ore grade fluctuations, requiring precise control to minimize slag losses and energy use, with recovery rates around 85-90% for nickel. While primarily serving traditional markets, SLN's output indirectly supports energy transition alloys through alloy recycling pathways, though cobalt recovery remains limited compared to limonite-based HPAL. Production in recent years has hovered at levels enabling annual ferronickel output of approximately 10,000-13,000 metric tons of contained nickel, with 2025 guidance at the lower end of prior ranges due to technical delays in processing upgrades.[39][40][41][34]Mineral Sands, Lithium, and Emerging Ventures
Eramet's mineral sands operations are centered on the Grande Côte Opérations (GCO) subsidiary in Senegal, which employs dredge mining to extract heavy mineral sands from a 100-kilometer coastal concession.[23] The process separates concentrates into ilmenite, rutile, leucoxene, and zircon, with GCO ranking as the world's fourth-largest producer of premium and standard-grade zircon.[42] These outputs primarily supply the titanium dioxide pigment market for paints, coatings, and plastics, as well as ceramics and foundry applications for zircon.[43] In the first half of 2025, ilmenite production increased 20% year-over-year to 304,000 tonnes, reflecting operational efficiencies amid market pressures.[44] The company's lithium activities focus on the Centenario-Ratones project in Argentina's Salta province, utilizing direct lithium extraction (DLE) technology to process brine into battery-grade lithium carbonate for electric vehicle batteries.[45] Phase I commissioning began in July 2024, with first production achieved in December 2024 at a capacity of 24,000 tonnes per year of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE).[20] The DLE method achieves approximately 90% extraction yield, uses two times less brine than traditional evaporation ponds, and recycles 60% of water, developed in partnership with IFPEN and Seprosys.[45] Eramet secured 100% ownership in October 2024 by repurchasing Tsingshan Holding Group's 49.9% stake for $699 million, enabling full control over expansion to adjacent Arizaro deposits with an estimated 15 million tonnes LCE resource.[21] Emerging ventures emphasize exploration for critical minerals to support energy transition demands, with Eramet's dedicated unit targeting sustainable deposits of metals like those essential for batteries and alloys beyond current operations.[46] While specific vanadium and rare earths initiatives remain in early assessment phases tied to long-term portfolio diversification, the strategy prioritizes onshore opportunities aligned with 2025 growth in high-value segments, avoiding unproven deep-sea ventures.[5] This approach integrates environmental and community considerations to identify replacements for maturing assets.[46]Global Presence
Operations in Africa
Eramet's manganese operations in Gabon are conducted through its subsidiary Comilog, which extracts high-grade ore from the Moanda mining complex, comprising the world's largest deposits of such quality.[29] The mines, including the Bangombé and Okouma sites, employ dry mining methods to produce manganese ore primarily for export, with annual output targeted at 6.5 to 7.0 million tonnes in 2024 amid market pressures.[47][48] Integrated logistics are facilitated by Setrag, a Comilog affiliate operating a dedicated rail line that transports ore over 560 kilometers from the mines to the Owendo port near Libreville, enabling efficient shipment to global markets while also supporting passenger and goods services.[29][2] In Senegal, Eramet manages mineral sands extraction via Eramet Grande Côte, a subsidiary exploiting a coastal dune deposit stretching 106 kilometers along the Atlantic and up to 4 kilometers inland.[49] Operational since 2014, the project processes heavy mineral concentrates, yielding products such as ilmenite for titanium dioxide production, rutile, leucoxene, and zircon for ceramics and foundry applications.[43][50] The mobile mining setup allows sequential advancement along the concession, with processing at a centralized plant designed to minimize environmental footprint through progressive land rehabilitation.[49] African operations are constrained by infrastructure dependencies, including rail and port capacities critical for export logistics; for instance, port bottlenecks in Gabon since late 2024 have disrupted manganese shipments, prompting efficiency measures.[44] Geopolitical stability poses additional risks, exemplified by Gabon's 2025 announcement of a raw manganese ore export ban effective 2029 to promote local processing, reflecting rising resource nationalism that threatens supply chain continuity despite Comilog's commitments to safeguard over 10,000 jobs.[51][52] These factors underscore the operational vulnerabilities in resource-rich yet infrastructure-limited regions.[28]Operations in Asia-Pacific
Eramet's primary asset in Indonesia is its minority stake in PT Weda Bay Nickel, which operates the Weda Bay mine on Halmahera Island, home to the world's largest nickel deposit.[23] The operation focuses on mining and processing nickel ore, with significant volumes directed toward Chinese smelters and processors integrated into regional supply chains for stainless steel and electric vehicle battery production.[39] In 2025, PT Weda Bay Nickel faced initial operational challenges, but Eramet raised its marketable nickel ore guidance to 36-39 million wet metric tons for the year, reflecting improved logistics and higher external sales volumes in the second quarter.[37] In New Caledonia, Eramet's subsidiary Société Le Nickel (SLN) manages ferronickel production through five mining centers and the Doniambo smelter in Nouméa.[39] SLN extracts laterite ore and converts it into ferronickel alloys primarily for the stainless steel industry, supplying Asian markets via established export routes.[23] The operations emphasize pyrometallurgical processing, with output integrated into global nickel flows despite regional logistical and market pressures.[26] These Asia-Pacific activities position Eramet to leverage high-grade nickel resources amid rising demand from battery and alloy sectors, with Weda Bay's scale enabling bulk ore exports to Indonesia's downstream processing hubs dominated by Chinese firms.[41] Overall marketed volumes from these sites are projected to recover in 2025 following first-quarter disruptions, supported by stabilized pricing and enhanced throughput.[53]European Headquarters and Other Activities
Eramet's headquarters is situated at 10 Boulevard de Grenelle in Paris, France, serving as the central hub for strategic decision-making, corporate functions, and oversight of global operations.[54] The group's primary research and development activities in Europe are centered at Eramet Ideas, located in Trappes near Paris, a facility established in 1972 that employs approximately 170 experts in geometallurgy, hydrometallurgy, and process innovation. This center supports advancements in metal extraction, recycling technologies, and sustainable metallurgy, including pilot-scale testing for battery-grade metal recovery from electric vehicle batteries.[55][56][57] Eramet's metallurgical processing in Europe focuses on value-added transformation of manganese ore into alloys, primarily through its fully owned subsidiary Eramet Norway, which operates three facilities in Porsgrunn, Kvinesdal, and Sauda. These plants produce silicomanganese and ferromanganese alloys essential for steelmaking, with output directed toward European markets and beyond, leveraging Norway's established expertise in ferroalloy production. The Norwegian operations trace back to Eramet's 2008 acquisition of Tinfos, rebranded as Eramet Titanium & Iron, enhancing the group's downstream capabilities in high-grade alloys.[58][59] Other European initiatives include the Ageli project in Alsace, France, a geothermal lithium extraction venture using patented direct lithium extraction from geothermal brines to produce up to 15,000 tonnes annually of battery-grade lithium hydroxide equivalent, while generating decarbonized heat and power. Designated a strategic project by the European Union in March 2025, Ageli aligns with EU goals for critical raw material security and energy transition. Plans for a lithium-ion battery recycling facility in Dunkirk, France, in partnership with Suez, were suspended in October 2024 amid unfavorable market dynamics for recovered metals.[60][61][62]Strategic Partnerships
Key Joint Ventures
Eramet holds a 43% stake in PT Weda Bay Industrial Park (IWIP), the entity overseeing the industrial complex, and participates in PT Weda Bay Nickel, the mining joint venture with Tsingshan Holding Group's Newstride Technology and Indonesia's PT Aneka Tambang (Antam), enabling access to one of the world's largest nickel laterite deposits spanning 45,000 hectares in North Maluku, Indonesia.[63][64] This partnership, formalized in 2017 through Strand Minerals Indonesia (where Tsingshan holds 57% and Eramet 43%), provides Eramet with operational control over mining activities, leveraging its expertise in sustainable extraction while Tsingshan supplies processing infrastructure for nickel pig iron and ferroalloys.[39][8] The collaboration facilitates high-capital-expenditure scale-up, with Weda Bay achieving first metal tapping in 2023 and producing 30.5 thousand tonnes of nickel in ferroalloys by 2024, mitigating individual firm risk through shared investment in a project exceeding $4 billion in development costs.[63][64] TiZir Limited represents another cornerstone joint venture, equally owned at 50% by Eramet and Australia's Mineral Deposits Limited (MDL), focusing on mineral sands extraction and processing synergies.[65] Established in 2011, TiZir operates the Grande Côte Operations (GCO) mine in Senegal, producing zircon, ilmenite, and rutile since 2014, with Eramet providing metallurgical know-how to integrate downstream value chains.[66] Historically, this extended to the TiZir Titanium & Iron (TTI) ilmenite upgrading plant in Norway, acquired by Tronox from Eramet in 2020 for $300 million, which processed GCO feedstock into titanium slag and pig iron until divestment.[67] The JV structure shares exploration and operational risks in heavy mineral sands, allowing Eramet to diversify beyond base metals into high-value titanium feedstocks while utilizing joint logistics for shipments from Senegal to European processing, enhancing efficiency in capital-intensive beneficiation.[65][68] In New Caledonia, Eramet's Société Le Nickel (SLN) subsidiary has engaged in targeted joint ventures for deposit beneficiation, such as a 2023 tripartite agreement with the South Province and Vale for two nickel sites, allocating 33% equity to Eramet alongside equal shares for partners to pool resources for processing amid regional industry challenges.[69] These arrangements underscore risk-sharing in high-cost, geopolitically sensitive mining environments, though SLN maintains primary operational control over its core ferronickel production at Doniambo, distinct from independent operators like Prony Resources.[70] Overall, Eramet's joint ventures emphasize equity positions that secure technology transfer, cost distribution, and market access in volatile commodities, prioritizing partners with complementary strengths in processing and regional influence.[39]Collaborative Projects and Alliances
Eramet has engaged in several research and development collaborations focused on battery technologies, particularly through European Union-funded initiatives aimed at sustainable metal recovery. In 2019, Eramet led the ReLieVe project in partnership with BASF and SUEZ to develop a closed-loop process for recycling lithium-ion batteries from electric vehicles, encompassing collection, dismantling, and hydrometallurgical recovery of metals such as lithium, cobalt, and nickel; the initiative received an initial EU grant of €4.7 million under the Horizon 2020 program, with subsequent support escalating to nearly €70 million by 2023 to advance industrial-scale implementation.[71][72] This effort aligns with broader European Innovation Partnerships on Raw Materials (EIP-RM), where Eramet participates in seven cooperative projects to innovate extraction and processing methods for critical minerals, emphasizing reduced environmental impact without equity stakes.[73] On the supply side, Eramet secured a 10-year manganese ore offtake agreement with Vibrantz Technologies in December 2023, providing high-grade ore from its Gabonese operations to support the production of manganese-based cathode materials for electric vehicle batteries, thereby securing downstream integration amid growing demand for alternatives to high-cobalt chemistries.[74] This non-equity pact underscores Eramet's strategy to leverage its manganese assets—producing around 5.5 million tonnes of ore annually—for battery supply chains, distinct from traditional steel applications.[75] In 2025, amid global nickel oversupply pressures that prompted Eramet to revise production targets downward to 1.7 million tonnes Ni ore equivalent in the first half, the company formed a strategic alliance with Indonesia's Danantara and the Indonesia Investment Authority (INA) in May to foster a sustainable nickel ecosystem for EV batteries, including technology transfer and efficiency enhancements in processing without immediate equity commitments.[76] This collaboration targets operational optimizations, such as improved ore grades, to counter market volatility while supporting Indonesia's downstream ambitions.[77]Corporate Governance
Leadership and Executive Team
Christel Bories has served as Chairwoman of Eramet's Board of Directors since 2017, initially combining the role with that of Chief Executive Officer until May 2025, when the positions were separated to enhance governance oversight.[78] Bories, a graduate of HEC Paris, brings extensive experience in industrial turnarounds, having held executive positions at companies including Alstom and Vallourec prior to her appointment at Eramet, where she initiated strategic diversification and operational restructuring amid challenging market conditions.[79] Her leadership has emphasized agile decision-making to position the company for transitions in critical minerals demand.[80] Paulo Castellari succeeded Bories as Chief Executive Officer on May 27, 2025, focusing executive responsibilities on operational execution and growth initiatives.[81] A dual Brazilian-Italian citizen born in 1970, Castellari possesses over 30 years of experience in mining and metals, including prior roles in investment and management at firms like Appian Capital Advisory, influencing decisions toward project development in high-potential regions such as Indonesia and Australia.[78] This transition reflects Eramet's evolving governance, prioritizing specialized operational leadership separate from board-level strategy.[82] The Board of Directors, chaired by Bories, comprises a balanced composition of independent directors and industry specialists, including figures like Emeric Burin des Roziers and Christine Coignard, fostering expertise-driven oversight on strategic risks and opportunities in mining and metallurgy.[83] French government entities maintain a minority stake, represented through board participation, which introduces public policy considerations into decision-making without dominating control, a structure rooted in post-privatization reforms that enhanced managerial autonomy since the late 1980s.[84] This setup supports rigorous evaluation of investments in volatile commodities while aligning with shareholder interests in long-term value creation.[27] The Executive Committee, reporting to the CEO, includes key figures such as Chief Financial Officer Abel Martins-Alexandre, appointed in September 2025, who oversees financial strategy, procurement, and IT to ensure fiscal discipline amid global supply chain pressures.[85] Other members, like Chief Operating Officer Kleber Silva, drive day-to-day influences on production efficiency and safety protocols across international operations, enabling responsive adaptations to market dynamics in manganese, nickel, and emerging battery materials.[86] This team's composition underscores a focus on technical proficiency and cross-functional coordination for sustainable competitive positioning.[83]Ownership Structure and Shareholder Influence
Eramet S.A. is publicly traded on Euronext Paris under the ticker symbol ERA, with its share capital distributed among major long-term holders, institutional investors, and a free float. As of recent disclosures, the Duval family, through entities like Sorame, holds approximately 37.08% of the shares, providing a stable family influence rooted in historical ties to the company's predecessor entities. The French government maintains a significant stake of 27.13%, managed via public investment vehicles, which underscores national strategic interests in critical minerals and metallurgy sectors.[87]| Major Shareholder | Ownership Percentage | Shares Held |
|---|---|---|
| Duval Family (via Sorame and affiliates) | 37.08% | 10,661,562 |
| Government of France | 27.13% | 7,801,093 |
| Société Territoriale Calédonienne de Participation Industrielle (STCPI) | 4.03% | 1,159,994 |
Financial Performance
Historical Revenue and Profitability Trends
Eramet's revenue and profitability have exhibited significant volatility since the 2000s, largely driven by fluctuations in nickel prices, which contrasted with the relative stability of its manganese operations tied to steady steel demand. During the commodity supercycle of the mid-2000s, group turnover benefited from rising nickel prices, reaching peaks before the 2008-2009 global financial crisis triggered a sharp downturn, with revenues contracting amid broader metal price collapses. The 2010s saw recovery followed by renewed pressure, particularly the 2015 nickel price crash—a 42% annual decline on the London Metal Exchange—which eroded profitability in the nickel segment, resulting in a current operating loss of €261 million for that unit despite group sales of approximately €3.1 billion.[17] Manganese production, primarily from Comilog in Gabon, provided a counterbalance, maintaining consistent output and pricing linked to global steel consumption, which averaged around 3-4 USD per dry metric ton unit during low nickel periods.[92] EBITDA trends reflect this commodity cycle sensitivity, with nickel-driven swings amplified by operational costs at assets like SLN in New Caledonia, while manganese alloys and ore contributed reliably to margins. Post-2015, efforts to cut nickel cash costs—reducing them by 10% year-over-year into 2016—mitigated some losses, but overall group EBITDA remained pressured until price recoveries.[93] By the late 2010s, manganese's share of revenue, often exceeding 40%, underscored its stabilizing role against nickel's 20-30% contribution amid oversupply risks.[94]| Year | Adjusted Turnover (€ million) | EBITDA (€ million) | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2020 | 2,792 | 516 | Resilience amid COVID-19 disruptions; net cash position strengthened.[95] |
| 2021 | 3,668 | 1,204 | Surge from elevated metal prices linked to steel and early EV demand recovery.[95] |
| 2022 | 5,385 | 1,897 | Peak profitability; nickel and manganese buoyed by industrial rebound.[95] |
| 2023 | 3,618 | 910 | Decline as prices normalized; deleveraging continued with net cash of €614 million.[95] |