Negotiating Offtake Agreements

the must-cover terms for secure, profitable mineral supply

 

1 Agree on the commercial backbone first

TermWhat you must pin downTips for leverage
Product & gradeExact mineral name, HS code, minimum / maximum assay limits (e.g., “Sb ≥ 48 %, As ≤ 0.15 %”)Make the Certificate of Analysis an integral schedule; deviations trigger price re-calculations, not re-negotiation
Annual volume + toleranceTotal tonnes per contract year (±10 % common) plus monthly delivery programmeAsk for “delivery windows” (e.g., 10 days) — delays inside the window are not default
Contract tenorSpot, 1 y roll-over, 3–5 y strategicLonger tenor wins better unit price; insist on annual price-review clause tied to index

2 Price-setting models

ModelHow it worksWhen to use
Fixed flat priceUSD X t⁻¹ for full termShort runs, stable markets (e.g., talc fillers)
Index-linked“LME 3-mo. average × payable % − discount”Cu/Au/Sb concentrates exposed to exchange price swings
Tiered payabilitySb payable = 85 % < 40 % Sb, 90 % 40–50 % Sb, 95 % > 50 % SbEncourages supplier to upgrade grade
Floor / cap collarPrice floats with index but cannot go outside bandWhen both parties must budget long-term capex

Always attach a worked example invoice in an annex.


3 Quality & penalties matrix

  • Include a table: each impurity (As, Hg, moisture, LOI) gets ▸ thresholdpenalty $ per excess unitrejection level.

  • Penalty math happens before payable metal or discounts, so its impact is transparent.


4 Delivery & risk hand-off

  • Incoterm (FOB, CFR, DAP, Ex-Works) + named place.

  • Shipment schedule: number of lots per year, minimum lot size.

  • Failure to ship/receive: liquidated damages as USD X t⁻¹ of undelivered tonnage.


5 Payment security

OptionTypical splitNotes
Irrevocable LC110 % invoice value, sight or usance 30 dProtects seller cash-flow; buyer pays LC fees
CAD / DP (Cash-against-Documents)10 – 20 % pre-payment, balance on BL copyUse parent guarantee or insurance for remaining risk
Open account + performance bond0 % advance; seller posts 5–10 % bondAcceptable when buyer is investment-grade

6 Security package

  • Performance bond: callable on quality / delivery failure.

  • Parent or bank guarantee if counter-party SPV is thin.

  • Title retention: ownership passes only after full payment or assay umpire.


7 Operational clauses that save headaches

  • Sampling & umpire lab — name two primary labs and one umpire; chain-of-custody rules.

  • Force Majeure — exclude licences lost, sanctions, or price collapse (these are business risks, not FM).

  • Take-or-Pay / Ship-or-Pay — defines financial remedy when either side misses volume.

  • Change-in-law — share incremental taxes/duties, but cap at e.g. 3 % of contract price.

  • Price-review trigger — renegotiate if index moves ±20 % over any rolling 3-month period.


8 Dispute-resolution ladder

  1. Senior commercial managers meet within 15 days.

  2. ICC or LCIA arbitration, seat and law chosen up front (Dubai, Singapore, London common).

  3. Awards enforceable via New York Convention.


9 Negotiation cheat-sheet

Point for buyer to pressPoint for seller to press
Wider quality tolerance, smaller penaltiesNarrow assays, higher bonus for high grade
Shorter laytime, demurrage at market ratesFree demurrage days or split cost 50/50
Payment on provisional assayFinal settlement on umpire assay with prompt advance

10 Key take-aways

  • Nail grade, volume, and price formula first; all other clauses flow from those.

  • Convert every technical spec into a number → penalty → rejection line.

  • Use performance bonds, LCs, or guarantees to neutralise counter-party default risk.

  • Refresh price annually or via collar to prevent windfall winners and losers.

  • Detail the sampling, assay, and dispute path — ambiguity here is the seed of most litigation.

Lock these elements in writing, and your offtake agreement will be financeable by banks and resilient to market swings.