Mining

Tin price outlook dims in 2022 – report

“However, prices won’t return to pre-pandemic levels due to the high cost of energy resources,” says IndexBox in a media release.

Tin prices were on a tear in 2021, rising from $21,920 per tonne in January to surging past $40,00 per tonne in November. That’s a gain of nearly 79%, marking tin as one of the best-performing commodities in 2021.

Click here for an interactive chart of tin prices

Tin price outlook dims in 2022, report
MINING.COM

According to IndexBox data, that spike was instigated by a metal deficit due to rising demand from the electronics sector, while global production stagnated over the past decade. Environmental restrictions, increased energy prices, and high freight rates coupled with the limitation of metal smelting in China propelled tin prices.

In value terms, analysts estimate revenues for global tin production to have shrunk by 11.3% in 2020, with China the leading consumer at 181,000 tonnes of metal in 2020 with the US the second-largest consumer at 30,000 tonnes.

Global tin exports fell 1.9% in 2020 from 2019 to 186,000 tonnes.

Leading the suppliers was Indonesia, which produced 65,000 tonnes of finished tin for 35% market share.

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