fängt an zu spinnen (glaube ich),
das sollte lediglich ein link /Querverweis zu HIER, Rächers post auf Seite 192,
#4812 sein.
@ Didaktiker:
Cn meint China,
ich setz euch hier mal den link zur MD&A von Labrador Iron MInes rein:
[denke mal, Rächer hat nichts dagegen, auch wenn es bissl o.T. ist]
Zitat LIM Seite 24/ wichtig der letzte Absatz/ wollte das Zeuch nur ned aus dem Zusammenhang reißen:
In the first half of 2021 the price of iron ore surged 40% to an all-time record US$235 per tonne in May, averaging US$184 for the period. During the second half of 2021, however, the price fell sharply to a low of US$87 (62% Fe Sinter Fines CFR China basis) in November, although it rallied to US$112 by the end of December. Overall, the price averaged US$162 for the full year and US$140 for the second half of the year.
A major driver of China’s boom in demand for steel (and thus iron ore) in the first half of 2021 was the considerable level of fiscal accommodation provided by the government in response to the Covid-19 pandemic. By mid-2021 this stimulus spending had declined, however, with total infrastructure investment contracting in June for the first time in over a year.
Slower construction activity beginning mid-year coincided with the implementation of energy
consumption and environmental control policies that tempered steel production in China and thus iron ore demand in the second half of the year.
By the end of 2021, however, and continuing in early 2022, the price rallied again, rising to US$150 by mid-February, representing a more than 70% increase relative to its November 2021 low. This market turnaround coincides with interest rate cuts in China intended to stimulate investment in its property and infrastructure sectors. More construction activity means higher steel output, which in turn raises iron ore demand. Additionally, in early February 2022, China announced 2030 as the new deadline for peak carbon emissions for the country’s steel sector, against an earlier target of 2025, in a move to prioritize economic growth by giving the steel industry five extra years to start reining in its
emissions.
===>>> Preliminary data for January 2022 indicate imports of 117.4 million tonnes of iron ore, which represents China’s highest month of imports ever, and 4.2% higher than the previous monthly record in July 2020.
China’s robust iron ore imports are consistent with expectations of strong construction activity in the first half of 2022, which activity is expected to accelerate particularly after conclusion of Lunar New Year festivities and the Beijing Winter Olympics. " <<<=== !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hintergrund:
https://www.ariva.de/forum/...or-iron-mining-wenn-der-einbruch-450675(war eigentlich nur für Rächer gedacht, er kennt mein Engagement hier. Aber ist ja kein Geheimnis ;-))
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