• NOBEL PRIZE: Economic Sciences, Economy 2024 (Graphic DUE Oct 14, 10:30GMT)
  • HISTORY: On this day October 20 26 (week 43) (Graphic)
  • CONFLICT: Middle East Sitrep – Oct 14, 2024 (Graphic DUE Oct 14, 12:00GMT)
  • ATHLETICS: Chepngetich breaks women’s marathon world record (Graphic DUE Oct 14, 15:00GMT)
  • ARCHAEOLOGY: New Tomb discovered in Petra (Graphic DUE Oct 14, 16:00GMT)
  • For full details of graphics available/in preparation, see Menu -> Planners
 Preço do minério de ferro em queda infographic
A infografia mostra os preços do minério de ferro ao longo dos anos.
GN46203PT

MATÉRIAS PRIMAS

Os dias de flória do minério de ferro terminaram

By Ninian Carter

August 19, 2024 - As décadas de aumento constante do preço do minério de ferro terminaram, com a China a refrear o investimento pesado e a construção de habitação e a mover-se para uma economia de serviços.

Since China’s industrialisation boom in the early 2000s, commodities such as oil and coal have surged in value by hundreds of percent.

But iron ore has been by far the biggest winner, rising by 937% since the mid-1990s – more than any other major commodity.

Now, the bonanza is over following China’s shift towards a service economy – away from heavy investment and housing construction. China inflated the boom and now it’s taking it down again.

As a result, iron ore, which is smelted to make steel, has fallen below $100 a tonne (down 55% from its 2021 all-time high of almost $220 a tonne) – still way higher than the 1980-2000 average price of $12.50 per tonne.

At current prices, the top mining behemoths can still turn a profit – for example, it costs Rio Tinto about $21 a tonne to excavate iron ore from the Pilbara region of Western Australia. But if prices fall towards $50 a tonne, the fortunes of Rio and other big producers like Vale, BHP, Fortescue, and Anglo American could suffer.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 19/08/2024; STORY: Graphic News
Advertisement