BHP exits Kabanga nickel project as Lifezone assumes full control

Lifezone takes full control as BHP exits Kabanga nickel project, targeting 2026 FID and 50,000 t/yr output.
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BHP exits Kabanga nickel project as Lifezone assumes full control
BHP

BHP exits Kabanga nickel project, selling its 17% stake to Lifezone Metals for up to $83mn. The transfer gives Lifezone 100% of Kabanga Nickel Ltd and full offtake rights. The move reflects BHP’s broader nickel retrenchment during a prolonged market slump.

Deal terms and strategic reset

Lifezone now owns KNL, which holds 84% of Tembo Nickel in Tanzania. The Tanzanian government retains a 16% stake in Tembo Nickel. Lifezone targets a 2026 final investment decision on the $2.49bn complex. The design pairs a mine with a hydrometallurgical refinery for battery-grade material. Nameplate output targets 50,000 t/yr of nickel in concentrate after ramp-up.

Project outlook and market headwinds

Nickel prices remain under pressure from Indonesian surpluses and softer demand. LME cash prices have fallen over 40% since early 2023. Economics across new projects have therefore tightened materially. BHP earlier placed Nickel West on care and maintenance. It plans a decision on that asset’s future by early 2027. Against this backdrop, BHP exits Kabanga nickel project to sharpen portfolio focus.

Lifezone frames Kabanga as a premier undeveloped sulphide deposit. Hydromet refining could deliver cleaner, higher-quality battery feed. The project aims to support EV supply chains with secure, traceable nickel. However, six years to full ramp leaves execution risk. Financing, power, and permitting will be decisive for timelines.

The Metalnomist Commentary

This handover trades super-major capital for specialist focus. If Lifezone proves its hydromet route at scale, Kabanga could reset African nickel. Yet market discipline and offtake financing must align before shovels truly matter.

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