Syrah Graphite Offtake Supports Non-China Anode Supply Chain Strategy

Syrah signs graphite offtake with NextSource to support non-China anode supply chain growth.
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Syrah Graphite Offtake Supports Non-China Anode Supply Chain Strategy
Syrah resources

Syrah graphite offtake plans with NextSource Materials could strengthen non-China graphite supply routes for battery anode production. The Australian producer may sell 34,000-68,000t of natural graphite fines over seven years, subject to commercial production at NextSource’s planned Abu Dhabi anode material plant.

The Syrah graphite offtake agreement depends on several conditions. NextSource has not yet made a final investment decision on the Abu Dhabi project, and both NextSource and its customers must approve the use of Syrah’s graphite fines. This makes the deal strategically important, but still dependent on qualification, financing, and project execution.

Syrah will supply the material from its Balama graphite mine in Mozambique. The mine produced 34,400t of natural graphite in October-December 2025, up from 25,700t in the previous quarter and no production a year earlier.

Balama Graphite Gains Value as Buyers Seek Supply Diversity

Balama graphite is becoming more important as battery supply chains seek alternatives to China-linked material flows. Syrah said the NextSource agreement prices Balama graphite at a premium to market indices, suggesting that qualified non-China supply is gaining strategic value.

Syrah’s average realised graphite price, including fines and coarse flakes, rose by 11pc year on year to $506/t fob Nacala in October-December 2025. Higher realised pricing supports the company’s effort to rebuild sales momentum after production interruptions and weak market conditions.

The deal also fits Syrah’s long-standing plan to increase graphite sales outside China. The company signed a six-year offtake agreement with South Korean producer Posco in 2024 and agreed to supply graphite to US producers Graphex Technologies and Westwater in 2023.

Graphite Trade Restrictions Increase Supply Chain Urgency

Graphite is moving deeper into the critical minerals policy debate because it is essential for lithium-ion battery anodes. China remains dominant in graphite processing, so automakers, battery makers, and governments are trying to develop alternative sources of feedstock and anode material production.

NextSource’s planned Abu Dhabi anode material plant could add a new processing node outside China if it reaches commercial production. Syrah’s graphite fines would provide feedstock for that strategy, while Mozambique would remain an important upstream source.

The timing matters because graphite trade restrictions are increasing. China recently banned sales of dual-use products, including graphite, to some Japanese producers. This reinforces the need for diversified supply chains that can connect African mine output, Middle Eastern processing, and battery customers in allied markets.

The Metalnomist Commentary

The Syrah-NextSource agreement shows that graphite supply security now depends on qualification pathways, not only mine output. Non-China anode supply chains will need reliable feedstock, bankable processing projects, and customers willing to pay for geopolitical resilience.

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