Sinomine Resource Slows Lithium Ore Production at Zimbabwe’s Bikita Mine Amid Price Fluctuations

Sinomine Resource cuts Bikita petalite production in Zimbabwe as lithium prices slump. Operations for other materials continue.
Sinomine Resource

Sinomine Resource, China’s leading lithium mining company, has partially suspended production at its Bikita petalite ore mine in Zimbabwe. The decision reflects falling lithium prices, which have significantly reduced profitability at the 2 million-tonne-per-year petalite site, the company reported. Operations involving other materials at Bikita remain ongoing, with spodumene concentrate production meeting Sinomine’s lithium smelting needs.

Falling Lithium Prices Force Adjustments

Bikita, capable of processing 2 million tonnes each of spodumene and petalite ore since its November 2023 expansion, is fully owned by Sinomine Resource. The site holds resources equivalent to 1.1679 million tonnes of lithium oxide, translating to 2.88 million tonnes of lithium carbonate equivalent (LCE). Earlier this year, Sinomine outlined plans to increase Bikita's output to full capacity, targeting 600,000 tonnes of lithium concentrate in 2024 — evenly split between spodumene and petalite.

The global lithium market has faced downward price pressures as new production capacity, especially in the battery-grade segment, has outpaced demand. Sinomine noted that Argus-assessed prices for 6% lithium concentrate (spodumene) were recorded at $750-820 per tonne (cif China) as of October 8, reflecting an 86% drop from the beginning of 2023.

Despite the price slump, Sinomine remains committed to its strategic resource management at Bikita, having delivered an initial 10,000-tonne batch of lithium concentrate to its lithium salt production lines in China in September 2023. However, future expansion will be closely aligned with price stabilization in the global lithium market.

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