LONDON — The auto industry took a step nearer to curbing its dependence on palladium after BASF developed a new technology for gasoline cars that substitutes some of the metal with cheaper platinum.
The technology, funded by two South African platinum miners, has been tested and does not compromise emissions standards, BASF said Tuesday.
The company expects the technology to mainly be implemented from 2023, with some applications possible the year before, after automakers test and certify that it meets government regulations on each vehicle, according to a spokesman.
Platinum rose as much as 3.2 percent before paring some gains as the announcement marked one of the first signs that automakers can overcome technical barriers to using the metal to replace palladium.
The latter has more than doubled over the past 18 months as the introduction of stricter emissions standards boosted demand and widened a supply deficit.
Partial substitution in the production of auto catalysts that curb emissions from vehicles might not fully eliminate the palladium deficit, but would boost platinum, according to the World Platinum Investment Council.
Platinum has languished as consumers turned away from the diesel vehicles in which the metal is mainly used. It’s now just over a third of the price of palladium.
The BASF spokesman said the amount of platinum used in the new catalysts would depend on the vehicle type and sales region. The company’s mining partners are Sibanye Stillwater and Impala Platinum Holdings.
Investors have been piling into exchange-traded funds linked to platinum in the last year, with physical holdings rising 21 percent over the last 12 months.
Palladium holdings meanwhile have been declining, with manufacturers withdrawing the metal amid shortages.
“Early indications are this newly developed catalyst design is a partial solution,” Matthew Watson, founder and president of Precious Metals Commodity Management in California, said in an email Tuesday.
While he said the pace of substitution is still unclear, ultimately about 300,000 ounces of demand for the metal in auto catalyst production could switch away from palladium and into platinum.
The development should support platinum in the longer term, but it could take a couple of years before the new catalyst is widely used by automakers, said Michael Sheehan, a portfolio manager at Orion Commodities Management.
Palladium declined 3.2 percent Tuesday, with Citigroup predicting the coronavirus outbreak would lower Chinese consumption of the metal this year.