Congo Government Struggled Increase Production Of Copper And Cobalt Mines
October 13th, 2009 | File Under : Companies - Copper - Mineral Exploration - Mining Exploration
The global economic crisis has made improving the mining sector in Congo region is slow, even some mining companies to stop the exploration activities. The increase in metal prices pushed mining companies to reactivate exploration and production activities of mining. The government hopes Congo copper and cobalt sector can increase production. Recovery of copper and cobalt production is very dependent on large projects in development.
Prices are again on the rise, trading at over $6,250 per tonne on Monday, double the level at the start of the year.
“But, among those companies that closed, there’s still not a real return. And new companies are not opening,” Kitungwa said.
Last year, production slipped to just 142,000 tonnes, down from 213,000 in 2007, and well below a 1986 peak of 476,000.
The crisis put half of the province’s estimated 300,000 informal miners out of work. The dozens of small companies which bought their ore, spurred by record high prices, shut their doors as thin profit margins evaporated.
Their production had accounted for the bulk of copper and cobalt exports, the country’s primary foreign currency earner. And, as multi-million dollar projects that boomed in the wake of successful 2006 elections push forward, Kitungwa said informal miners have been increasingly sidelined.
“The concessions that they were exploiting were handed back over to the big multi-national companies. Now they don’t have enough sites to work, which has created a shortage of material arriving at treatment facilities,” he said.
INDUSTRIAL COMEBACK
But while production levels are expected to remain low in the short-term, investor interest is booming and financing is flooding back in as part of a trend that promises to boost industrial production in coming years.
Earlier this year, Freeport-McMoRan’s giant Tenke Fungurume mine, widely regarded as the world’s largest and highest grade undeveloped copper and cobalt project, went online.
Katanga Mining announced last month that it had expanded its operations by acquiring the Kamoto mine. The Toronto-listed firm expects to ramp up production to 150,000 tonnes of copper in 2011.
Australia’s Anvil Mining recently finalised a financing deal worth $200 million with Trafigura Beheer B.V., and Eurasian Natural Resources Corp is in negotiations to buy AIM-listed junior Central African Mining and Exploration Co. for $950 million.
“Looking at the general environment in the mining sector, we must consider that the production rebound can only come from the big investors, because the big investors have more efficient extraction and production,” Kitungwa said.
That, he says will help offset one of Congo’s lingering growth limitations: excessively high production costs. The price of extracting a tonne of copper in Congo is around $2,800 to $3,000. In contrast, production costs in South American copper giant Chile are around $1,700 per tonne.
“We’re optimistic. Very, very optimistic. We know that we have the best copper and cobalt mines,” Kitungwa said.
“The rebound will come. Economies work on a principle of cycles, and that after the low cycle things will improve. We’ll come back.”
source : Reuters
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