Title: Can%20the%20U.S.%20act%20alone%20on%20mercury?
1Can the U.S. act alone on mercury?
Session 1 Economics of the Worldwide Mercury
Market Materials Flow
- Some initial hypotheses from the analysis of
commodity flows - Edward Weiler, Economist
- (202) 564-8836
- weiler.edward_at_EPA.gov
- U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
- May 1, 2002
Prepared for Breaking the Cycle Long-term
Management of Surplus Recycled Mercury
Mercury-Bearing Waste Hynes Convention Center,
Boston, Massachusetts, May 1-3, 2002
2Key Questions to be Addressed
- What do we know about world supply and demand for
mercury? - What is the relationship between the U.S. and
world markets? - What does the future hold for supply and demand?
- What are the implications for environmental
policy?
3World Supply and DemandPrimary Mine Production
- Three key producing nations
- Spain, Kyrgystan, Algeria(for export)
- China (for domestic demand), but mines rumored to
be closing - Production lumpy but declining
- 9 average annual declinesince 1987
- Kyrgystan is exception
- Virgin producers also broker secondary supply
from non-mining sources.
Source Metal Statistics 1997 2000 U.S.
Geological Survey Minerals Yearbook 2000
4World Supply and DemandSecondary Production
- Very dependent on rate of chlor-alkali shutdowns
large potential for year to year variability. - Mining by-product assumed to be all production in
countries other than Spain, Kyrgyzstan, Algeria
and China. - Recycling numbers for devices approximately 40-80
tonnes per year in U.S. Similar quantity assumed
in Europe. - Flow from stockpiles could also be significant in
a given year.
5World Supply and DemandDemand Trends
- World demand data very scarce
- GOBI International data points are only summary
available - North America, Europe dominate mercury use
- 70 of total use in 1990 and 59 in 1996
- Northeast Asia is also important locus (China,
primarily) - Data suggest downward demand trend
- Total demand declined 33 from 1990 to 1996
- Not clear that northeast Asia is declining
- Important continuing uses
- Artisanal gold mining potentially significant
quantities of Hg used, released - Lighting expanding uses (small quantities)
6U.S. and World Demand
Sources U.S. Demand U.S. Bureau of Mines
Circular 9412 and USGS Minerals Yearbook 1994 -
1997, World Demand GOBI International
7World DemandArtisanal Gold Mining
- Could represent an important contributor to world
demand - Representative mercury use is 1 gram hg per gram
of gold extracted - Estimates indicate 180 to 250 tonnes per year of
artisanal gold production worldwide (Veiga, MMSD) - Suggests mercury used by miners would be several
hundred tonnes per year, but estimate is highly
uncertain - Demand for mercury by miners is insensitive to
mercury price - Hg cost is very small relative to value of
recovered gold (approximately 0.1) - Amazon mercury prices five times market rates
still affordable
8Domestic Supply and DemandSecondary and
By-Product Production
- Non-virgin supply in U.S.now exceeds total
demand - U.S. not dependent onworld markets
- "Lumpy" supply, internationalnature of trade
preclude "closed" market - According to one expert, recent U.S. demand
significantly lower than 400 tonnes
Source U.S. Bureau of Mines Circular 9412 and
USGS Minerals Yearbook 1994 - 1997
9U.S. Trade Patterns Net Imports/Exports
Source US International Trade Commission
- U.S. is often a net exporter, but patterns vary.
- Import/exports reflect market making, as well as
balancing domestic supply/demand.
10World Mercury Prices
- Clear downward trend
- data limitations do not alter this conclusion
- Trend consistent across pricing sources
- Bottom line Mercury production and sale is
significantly smaller and less profitable
enterprise - Also, falling prices do not appear to increase
demand
Source Platt Metals Week 1980-1998,
Metallstatistik 1995
11Mercury Pricing U.S. and World
- U.S. spot prices track withEuropean prices.
- U.S. market independent, but clearly linked to
world markets through pricing.
Source Platt Metals Week 1980-1998,
Metallstatistik 1995, and American Metal Market
12Primary Production Response to Price Changes
- Primary production tracks price
- other mercury supplies driven by regulation, gold
prices - Virgin mines very responsive to price
Source American Metal Market and Metal
Statistics 1997 2000 U.S. Geological Survey
Minerals Yearbook 2000
13Future Supply/Demand ScenariosPossible Demand
Scenarios
- High-Demand
- 50 percent decline in chlor-alkali world demand,
and 50 percent decline in most mercury product
uses over 20 years - Metal halide lamp growth of 15 percent per year
- Medium Demand
- 70 percent decline in chlor-alkali demand over 20
years, and 10 percent per year decline in product
uses, consistent with recent trends - Halide lamp demand grows at 15 percent for next
five years - Low Demand
- All chlor-alkali plants phased out over next 10
years, most product uses decline by 20 percent
per year. - Halide lamp demand grows for five years, then
declines
14Future Supply/Demand ScenariosPossible Supply
Scenarios
- Low Supply (consistent with high demand)
- 50 percent decline in chlor-alkali plants over 20
years no recycling increases - Medium Supply
- 70 percent decline in chlor-alkali plants over 20
years - 5 percent per year increase in recycling of
mercury wastes - High Supply (consistent with low demand)
- All chlor-alkali plants closed over next 10 years
- 10 percent per year increase in recycling of
mercury wastes - Virgin production assumed to close gap between
secondary supply and demand byproduct production
constant
15Future Supply/Demand ScenariosCumulative Future
Demand and Supply
16Future Supply/Demand ScenariosKey Insights
- Excess Hg could exist in medium, low scenarios
- Even "high demand" scenario results in 35 percent
drop in demand from current levels. - Mines will be first to close
- Mines highest cost source of supply
- Other sources of supply unaffected by Hg demand
- Excess supply may lead to further decline in hg
prices - At some point, sale of Hg becomes impossible
17Implications for Policy
- Storage/treatment option is needed
- Excess mercury may have no market
- Storage costs not insignificant
- Initial estimate 500-700 per ton (NPV over 10
years) - Also lost revenue from sale of mercury plus
future treatment costs - Extent of storage will depend on specifics of
storage policy
18Implications for PolicyStockpile Releases
- Potential stockpile releases likely to reduce
virgin production - Drop in Spanish production in mid-1990s coincided
with stockpile releases mining responsive to
price and supply - Impact on Hg demand likely minimal
- Could reduce emissions associated with Hg mining
- Impact on U.S. suppliers limited in low and
medium supply scenarios, as DLA releases only
replace virgin production
19Conclusions
- Can U.S. act alone on mercury?
- No Markets are integrated.
- What does the future mercury market look like?
- Structural decline in demand unaffected by price.
- Likely to continue to drop to point where sale of
excess mercury is difficult. - What are implications for policy?
- Storage/treatment/disposal important for excess
mercury. - Stockpile releases may offset virgin production
or be used strategically to discourage virgin
production.