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By

LAUNCESTON, (Australia): Iron ore is enjoying a rally built largely on two factors that have yet to eventuate, a renewed building boom in China and possible supply disruptions in top exporter Australia.

The spot price of iron ore for delivery to north China , as assessed by commodity price reporting agency Argus, ended at $137.60 a tonne on Wednesday, a surge of 58% since the 18-month low of $87 in mid-November.

The catalysts for the rally are effectively a fear and a hope, and together they are proving enough to give the steel-making raw material a bullish tone.

The fear is that Australia’s supply will be affected by the Omicron coronavirus variant breaching the walls of fortress Western Australia state, which until now has been one of the few jurisdictions in the world to keep COVID-19 at bay using strict border controls.

Western Australia is home to the bulk of Australia’s iron ore mines, which in turn supply about 70% of the imports by China, the world’s biggest buyer of the raw material.

The state recorded 24 new cases of COVID-19 on Wednesday, and while this appears a tiny number compared to the 17,316 new cases and 29 deaths recorded in New South Wales state the same day, the concern is that Western Australia is at the start of an Omicron wave.

“We now have an outbreak and we’re not going to be able to get it under control,” Western Australia Premier Mark McGowan said on Wednesday.

Despite this pessimism, McGowan is still keeping his state’s borders shut in a bid to control how fast Omicron spreads, but this may also end up lowering iron ore output.

Many of the workers at the remote mines reside in other states and the big miners are concerned that some will give up their jobs unless Western Australia’s border controls are relaxed, allowing them to travel freely between the mines and their homes in Australia’s eastern states.

Rio Tinto, BHP Group and Fortescue Metals Group, Australia’s biggest iron ore miners, have all flagged likely labour disruptions to their operations.

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