MELBOURNE/VANCOUVER (Reuters) - Nervous Asian battery makers are turning to early-stage cobalt projects in Australia and Canada to lock in supplies of the critical battery ingredient ahead of expected shortages as demand for electric vehicles revs up.

FILE PHOTO: The logo of SK Innovation is seen in front of its headquarters in Seoul, South Korea, February 3, 2017. REUTERS/Kim Hong-Ji/File Photo

Mine developers say interest from Japanese and Korean firms is particularly strong as they compete with rivals from China, which has built deep supply chain ties with the Democratic Republic of Congo, the world’s top producer.

The central African country accounts for nearly two-thirds of global cobalt output and production is set to rise despite concerns over the use of child miners and rising royalties.

"We are starting to see the first signs of an arms race to secure long term cobalt supplies," said Joe Kaderavek, chief executive of Australia's Cobalt Blue COB.AX.

“With over 85 percent of new global cobalt supply over the next decade coming from Africa, in a region where the Chinese have entrenched relationships, the Korean and Japanese cobalt processing industries are very focused upon Australian and Canadian projects.”

South Korean battery maker SK Innovation Co Ltd 096770.KS locked in a seven-year supply deal with Australian Mines AUZ.AX last month, helping to win funding for a project that has yet to make a final investment decision and does not expect to produce any cobalt until at least 2020.

At least half a dozen Australian and Canadian mine developers are currently in talks on potential supply deals with battery and automakers for production at some point beyond late 2019-2021, company executives told Reuters.

These include Australia's Aeon Metals AML.AX, Northern Cobalt N27.AX and Cobalt Blue, and Canada's Ecobalt ECS.TO and Fortune Minerals FT.TO.

China's Beijing Easpring Material Technology Co 300073.SZ, which makes products for battery makers, has also signed a binding five-year deal with Australian mine developer Clean Teq CLQ.AX.

“We are speaking to a number of parties about the balance of the offtake - that includes not just Chinese potential customers but also customers from other parts of the world,” Clean Teq’s CEO Sam Riggall told Reuters.

In an indication of heightened demand, Riggall said automotive companies were also showing interest, along with cathode manufacturers, the direct users of cobalt, a key material in lithium-ion batteries.

DRC GROWTH

In the DRC, production is set to rise sharply, driven by commodity giant Glencore Plc GLEN.L, the world's biggest producer, and Luxembourg's ERG taking DRC's share of global output to over 75 percent by 2023, according to UK-based Darton Commodities.

Glencore last week agreed to sell around a third of its cobalt production over the next three years to Chinese battery recycler GEM Co Ltd 002340.SZ.

Developments in Australia and Canada will be small to mid-size, producing around 1,000 to 5,000 tonnes each, in a global market expected to swell to some 157,000 tonnes by 2023.

Fortune Minerals said it has signed 25 confidentiality agreements, while Australia's Ardea Resources ARL.AX said it has seen significant interest.

“Certainly some of the groups that we have spoken to have said that they won’t look at DRC sources, they want clean ethical sources of cobalt,” said Ardea Managing Director Matthew Painter.

Japan's Panasonic 6752.T, the main battery supplier to Tesla Inc TSLA.O, said it was aware of issues in the DRC and was looking to source some material elsewhere, and it was also looking at lowering its dependency on cobalt.

“Regarding concerns about procuring cobalt and other raw materials, we are addressing this by establishing advance procurement contracts and developing new procurement routes,” the company said in emailed comments.

South Korea's Samsung SDI 006400.KS and LG Chem 051910.KS declined to comment specifically on procurement but also said they were looking at other methods to source cobalt and to reduce usage.

RISKS REMAIN

Despite surging share prices for some cobalt developers, analysts warn the projects are not without risk, given fickle technology and the high cost of processing out contaminants like arsenic, found in some North American operations.

Clean Teq shares more than doubled in the second half last year, but have since slipped 20 percent, partly because it has twice delayed the date of its definitive feasibility study, said Larry Hill, an analyst with Canaccord Genuity in Australia.

Still, the company easily raised A$150 million ($117 million) this month, and pulled forward its production timeline by a year.

“There’s still a lot of upside in any cobalt supply that is ex-DRC,” said James Eginton, an investment analyst with Sydney’s Tribeca Global Natural Resources Fund, which took part in the raising.

“The challenges of the DRC make anything that comes out of anywhere else a lot more attractive.”

(This story corrects location of ERG to Luxembourg, not Russia, in paragraph 14.)