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India's Copper Demand Bounces Back; Grows 27% In FY22

The government's push to boost power infrastructure resulted in 75.7 per cent growth in copper demand from this sector

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Propelled by strong policy reforms across sectors, the post-pandemic demand for copper is back on the growth track in FY22 (April 2021 to Mar 2022), registering a YoY growth of over 27.5 per cent in India. 

The demand for red metal stood at 12.5 lakh tonnes in FY22, compared to 9.78 lakh tonnes in FY21 on the back of the growth across power infrastructure, real estate, consumer durables and the industrial sector in the country. 

The findings are part of the Annual Report on Copper Demand in India (FY22) which was released by the International Copper Association India (ICA India) on Tuesday.

The uptick in demand also resulted in copper producers ramping up their production. Indian integrated producers increased their copper wire rod production by 28.7 per cent YoY as the demand increased in FY 22. 

Copper being a global commodity is largely mined in the southern hemisphere of the globe and the northern hemisphere is a bigger user of the metal. 

With limited mining in India, (contributing 2.5 per cent of total demand), India is dependent on imports of copper concentrate, anode and blisters for cathode production. The overall cathode production in India stood at 485 KT and imports at 134 KT. 

Domestic scrap (copper and brass) amounted to 312 KT with imports of 131 KT. The total input material available for fabricators was 979 KT. 

Mayur Karmarkar, Managing Director, ICA India said, 'With the growing affordability and the growth in India's middle class, the demand for energy-efficient electrical goods and better-quality power will rise. India is currently nearing the flex point of the wealth 'S' curve. After the economy reaches this point, the consumption of commodities grows at much higher rate than in the past."

With limited capacities for cathode production currently operational in the country, India is depended on imports of cathode & semis to meet its demand. The remaining gap is filled by domestically generated scrap which lacks robust process of refining and remelting resulting in poor quality, he added.

'In the current background of growing demand, globalization and net zero ambitions of other developed & developing economies, there is a need for India to develop a copper resource strategy ensuring India's Amrit Kaal vision is achieved successfully in a cost optimum way," he added.

The report highlighted that 36 per cent of the country's demand was met through scrap and 64 per cent through primary copper. Cathode, rod and tubes import stood at 297 KT.

In terms of sector-wise growth, copper usage in building construction sector grew by 25.3 per cent while copper demand for the industrial sector grew by 26.3 per cent on the back of the strong domestic demand conditions and greater capacity utilisation. 

The government's push to boost power infrastructure resulted in 75.7 per cent growth in copper demand from this sector. 

The consumer durables sector also witnessed a growth in demand for copper by 15 per cent and copper demand in the agriculture sector grew by 16.2 per cent.
(ANI/NewsVoir)  


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