Stock Markets April 25, 2026 01:44 AM

PLS Sees Broader Lithium Demand as Production Nearly Doubles; Energy Security Cited as a Driver

Australian independent miner posts record spodumene output, secures ARENA grant and pursues further offtake agreements

By Jordan Park
PLS Sees Broader Lithium Demand as Production Nearly Doubles; Energy Security Cited as a Driver

PLS reported a record quarter of spodumene concentrate production, nearly doubling output on stronger recovery at its Pilgangoora operation and rising prices for the battery raw material. CEO Dale Henderson cited energy security concerns and expanding demand across stationary batteries and e-mobility as underpinning market momentum. The company also announced plans to ramp up its Ngungaju plant, reported lower unit costs sequentially, and secured a funding grant from ARENA to support mid-stream validation work.

Key Points

  • PLS reported a record 232,436 dmt of spodumene concentrate in the quarter, an 86% increase year-on-year, supported by ~75% lithium recovery at Pilgangoora.
  • Management cites energy security concerns and expanding demand from stationary batteries and e-mobility, alongside evidence of recovering EV demand from customer engagements in China.
  • The company plans to ramp Ngungaju to steady-state through the September quarter, is negotiating further offtake and supply agreements, and secured up to A$38.1 million from ARENA to support mid-stream validation.

PLS said it is observing a widening and deepening demand profile for lithium, with energy security concerns contributing to growth in interest from customers and industry participants, according to chief executive Dale Henderson. The comments accompanied a quarter in which the Australian independent miner nearly doubled its lithium-related output and exceeded analyst forecasts.

Henderson highlighted feedback from customer and industry discussions held during a recent trip to China, noting these conversations aligned with other data pointing to a rebound in electric vehicle demand. "In aggregate, what were seeing in the sector is deepening and broadening demand and strong tailwinds for lithium operators," Henderson said. He also pointed to robust interest from the stationary battery market and nascent e-mobility segments such as electric trucks.

Investors reacted to the operating update, pushing PLS shares up as much as 6.2% to A$6.030. By 0225 GMT the stock was trading slightly below that peak at A$5.890.


Record quarter for spodumene production

PLS reported an 86% rise in third-quarter spodumene concentrate production, driven by a stronger-than-expected recovery at its Pilgangoora facility in Western Australia and a rebound in prices for the battery raw material. Recovery at Pilgangoora averaged around 75% during the quarter, a key factor behind the near-doubling of output.

For the quarter ended March 31, the miner produced a record 232,436 dry metric tons (dmt) of spodumene concentrate, topping the Visible Alpha consensus estimate of 215,000 dmt and sharply higher than the 124,978 dmt produced in the same period a year earlier. Spodumene shipments during the quarter rose to 195,691 dmt, up from 125,468 dmt a year earlier.

Management said it plans to ramp the Ngungaju plant in Western Australia to steady-state production through the September quarter, while major maintenance overhauls are scheduled for the current quarter. Henderson added that PLS is in negotiations with major chemicals producers over supply agreements and is seeking additional offtake deals on terms comparable to its benchmark agreement with Chinas Canmax announced in February.

Unit operating costs fell 11% sequentially to A$520 per metric ton, though the company cautioned these costs are expected to rise in the current quarter because of restart-related expenditures at Ngungaju.

"A clear beat, driven by stronger-than-expected production and a meaningful cost outperformance," said RBC Capital analyst Kaan Peker in a note.

PLS reaffirmed its 2026 production outlook of 820,000-870,000 tonnes. In addition, the company said it had secured a funding grant of up to A$38.1 million ($27.17 million) from the Australian Renewable Energy Agency (ARENA). The grant is intended to help support operating costs during the Mid-Stream Demonstration Plants validation phase. ($1 = 1.4023 Australian dollars)

Risks

  • Unit operating costs are expected to increase in the current quarter due to restart-related expenses at the Ngungaju plant, which could pressure margins and operating cash flow - impacting mining and battery-materials markets.
  • Major maintenance overhauls scheduled for the ongoing quarter present execution and timing risks that could affect short-term production levels - relevant to mining operations and downstream battery supply.
  • Progress on securing additional offtake and supply agreements is ongoing and uncertain; failure to secure deals on benchmark terms could affect revenue visibility for chemicals and battery supply sectors.

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