Survey of the World Antimony Situation in 1949

This note condenses the CIA’s Survey of the World Antimony Situation (1948 – 1949), focusing on the geography of production, reserves, and trade, as well as the United States’ consumption patterns and emergency‑stock considerations. The material is organized to help you grasp the main supply‑side dynamics, price behavior, and strategic options for antimony in a compact, exam‑friendly format.

Survey of the World Antimony Situation
  1. World Antimony Production 1939‑1948
  2. Smelting Industry
  3. Antimony Primary Uses
  4. United States Position between 1946‑1948
  5. Future Outlook & Emergency Planning
  6. Key Statistics (Quick Reference)

World Antimony Production 1939‑1948

The report tabulates recoverable antimony (92 % of ore content) in metric tons for each country.

Production peaked in 1943 (≈ 53 200 t) during WWII and fell sharply after the war.

Country / Region1939194019411942194319441945194619471949
North America
Canada5501 0831 3291 269465809696286480124
Honduras23103110651185
Mexico7 24311 28610 24110 75912 58510 0568 0536 0466 3716 790
United States3284121 0132 4574 6363 9521 6112 0914 4375 416
South America
Argentina9791123411007113
Bolivia (exports)9 25510 81313 68016 23116 5366 8525 0936 4079 98911 280
Peru7758091 4401 4572 4729322 0419691 1401 770
Europe
Czechoslovakia1 0121 1041 6453 1301 1152 1561 4341 593
France128153116153202200
Austria102184263915716581321582247
Italy674630819667522403348330450130
… (other European producers omitted for brevity)
Asia
China12 0178 4697 9893 5105052034261 9093 251
Japan12518025035060045021049100124
… (other Asian producers omitted)
All figures are metric tons of recoverable antimony (≈ 92 % of gross content) – source: CIA report .

Key take‑aways

  • China supplied two‑thirds of world output before 1937; war crippled its industry.
  • Bolivia and Mexico became the principal suppliers after 1937, with Bolivia briefly leading (1941‑44).
  • U.S. production was modest (≈ 5 000 t in 1943) but grew to ≈ 5 400 t in 1948, covering ~ 30 % of its consumption.
Antimony mines map of China

Estimated World Reserves in 1944

Reserve estimates are highly uncertain; only China and the United States have government‑backed figures. The table below captures the order‑of‑magnitude picture for the principal producers.

CountryMetric tons of antimony metal (estimated)
China3 802 870
Bolivia700 000
Mexico700 000
United States103 500
Peru70 000
Yugoslavia100 000
Czechoslovakia50 000
Union of South Africa80 000
Australia60 000
USSR150 000
Reserve values are expressed in metric tons of metal content – source: CIA report .

Insight – Because antimony occurs in small, irregular bodies, most deposits are hand‑mined; expanding reserves would require capital‑intensive “block‑out” development that is often uneconomic.

Smelting Industry

  • Pre‑1944: China possessed the world’s largest smelting capacity; Japanese capture of Changsha in 1944 destroyed most plants.
  • Post‑war: The United States now has the largest smelting capacity for antimony metal and oxide. Smaller capacities (≈ 1 t day⁻¹) exist in the UK, Belgium, France, Yugoslavia, Germany, Italy, Japan, Australia, and the USSR.
  • Typical plant size: Many foreign smelters handle only a ton or so per day with makeshift equipment.
  • U.S. capability: Sufficient to meet domestic demand provided ore is available.

Technology & Processing in Antimony

  1. Ore characteristics – Antimony occurs in low‑temperature, shallow, narrow fissure fillings. Grades range 3–12 % Sb; Chinese and Bolivian ores can exceed this.
  2. Beneficiation – Hand‑sorting, jigs, and gravity concentration are common; losses are high.
  3. Roasting vs. Liquation
    • Roasting converts sulfides to volatile oxides for condensation.
    • Liquation (melting) separates a high‑Sb sulfide matte (“crude”) from gangue when ore > 50 % sulfide.
  4. Smelting routes
    • Oxide smelting (blast, reverberatory, crucible) produces regulus (99 %+ Sb).
    • Crude sulfide smelting with scrap iron yields metal + FeS residue.
    • Lee Muir process refines antimonial lead from Idaho lead ores.
  5. Product forms – Standard ingots (≈ 56 lb) are cast in 10×10×2½ in. dimensions; “starred” ingots claim higher purity (≥ 99.6 % Sb).

Antimony Primary Uses

  • Lead alloying (4–12 % Sb) – Provides hardness for bullet cores, shrapnel, storage‑battery plates, pipe, and cable covering.
  • Type metal – Antimony expands on cooling, giving sharp, clear type.
  • Other alloys – Solder, pewter, Britannia metal, sterline, and Queen’s metal.
  • Compounds
    • Oxides for fire‑retardant paints, enamel pigments, and water‑resistant coatings.
    • Sulfides for vulcanization pigments, safety‑match heads (≈ 3 % Sb₂S₃), and lead‑acid battery plate liners.

Alternative to Antimony ( as an Emergency Options)

SubstituteTypical applicationComments
CalciumHard‑lead alloys (cable, bearings, bullets)Much cheaper but less effective; limited availability in war.
BismuthPartial replacement in battery platesScarce; similar price to antimony.
CadmiumBearing metalsReplaces antimony but is toxic; not a long‑term solution.
Tin oxide / Cadmium pigmentsCeramic and enamel pigmentsHigher cost; may be in short supply.
Other metal oxides (e.g., titanium compounds)PigmentsNiche use; not a full substitute.

Bottom line – Substitutes are more expensive and often scarcer than antimony, limiting their usefulness in a prolonged emergency.

United States Position between 1946‑1948

  • Domestic production – Primarily from the Yellow Pine mine (Idaho). Output rose from 14 % of U.S. consumption (1946) to 42 % (1948).
  • Imports – Shifted from regulus (pre‑Laredo smelter) to ore concentrates after the Laredo plant (1930) came online. 1943 peak: 27 021 t of antimony‑containing ore (≈ 2 / 3 of world primary production). Main sources: Mexico, Bolivia, Peru, with occasional shipments from China (pre‑war).
  • Tariffs – Ores duty‑free; metal and oxide taxed at 1 ¢/lb, needle antimony at 0.25 ¢/lb, sulphides at 0.5 ¢/lb + 12.5 % ad valorem. Rates unchanged since 1930 (except metal/oxide duty reduced from 2 ¢/lb in 1948).
  • Prices – Highly volatile; New York spot price rose from 12 c/lb (1939) to a wartime high of 44.71 c/lb (1917), fell to 4.32 c/lb (1921‑22), then climbed to 40.17 c/lb (Dec 1948).

Consumption Snapshot (primary antimony, metric t)

YearPrimary consumptionSecondary (scrap)Total US consumption
194317 69714 04631 743
194615 10217 34135 953
194814 02019 78833 808
Data from Table 3 and Table 4 of the CIA report .

Future Outlook & Emergency Planning

  • Supply‑demand balance (1947‑48) – Near‑equilibrium, but stockpiles (excluding strategic reserves) fell from 16 664 t (end‑1946) to 14 481 t (Dec 1948).
  • Projected 1949 supply – ≈ 41 000 t (similar to 1948). Anticipated sources: domestic ore, Mexican and Bolivian concentrates, limited Chinese shipments.
  • Emergency requirement – An annual shortfall of ≈ 22 500 t would need to be covered by foreign ore; the report estimates:
    • Mexico: 8‑10 000 t
    • Bolivia: 10‑12 000 t (potentially 16 000 t within three years)
    • Peru: 1 000 t (up to 3 500 t if needed)

Stockpile Recommendations

  1. Maintain at least a one‑year primary antimony reserve (≈ 27 000 t) to buffer labor or transport disruptions.
  2. Secure purchase contracts for the entire output of Mexico and Bolivia in emergencies; relax specification (e.g., accept < 60 % Sb) to boost output.
  3. Provide advance payments or loan incentives to small‑scale miners (especially in Bolivia and Mexico) to raise production quickly.

Key Statistics (Quick Reference)

  • World peak production (1943): 53 200 t (recoverable).
  • Largest reserves: China ≈ 3.8 million t; Bolivia ≈ 0.7 million t; Mexico ≈ 0.7 million t.
  • U.S. 1948 primary consumption: 14 020 t; secondary recovery: 19 788 t.
  • U.S. import tariff (metal): 1 ¢/lb; oxide: 1 ¢/lb; needle: 0.25 ¢/lb.
  • Typical antimony alloy composition: 4‑12 % Sb in lead for batteries, cable, and ammunition.

All numbers are drawn from the CIA “World Antimony Situation” report (Document No. 001, 1948).

Declassified document on Antimony
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