Peru mining protests risk clogging $53 billion investment pipeline,
industry warns
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[May 17, 2022] By
Marco Aquino
LIMA (Reuters) - Peru, the world's
second-largest copper producer, risks losing out on billions of dollars
of mining investment if the government fails to defuse protests that are
hitting the industry and denting production, analysts and executives
said.
Social conflicts have risen in the Andean nation over the past year
since socialist President Pedro Castillo came into office, with a spate
of protests against mines, including one that has halted production at
the huge Las Bambas copper deposit.
With global prices soaring on high demand, that now threatens a mining
investment pipeline of some $53 billion and could stall future projects
expected by investment bank RBC to make up 12% of the world's copper
supply in years to come.
"Without any world-class projects on the horizon, the prospects for
sustaining production are not good," said Gonzalo Tamayo, analyst at
Macroconsult and a former Peruvian mines and energy minister.
Mining executives and analyst met last week in Peru's capital Lima,
where the main concern was falling investment tied to rising social
protests. A central bank report shows investment dipping some 1% this
year and 15% in 2023.
The conflicts, mainly in poor Andean areas where communities feel
bypassed by the huge mineral wealth beneath their soils, have started to
bite, with protesters emboldened under Castillo who won election
pledging to redistribute mining wealth.
Southern Copper's Cuajone mine was paralyzed for almost two months
earlier this year.
Las Bambas, owned by China's MMG Ltd, suspended operations in April
after an invasion of the mine by communities demanding what they called
ancestral lands. The mine, which produces 2% of the world's copper
output, remains offline.
Las Bambas had received government approval in March to expand the mine,
a plan which is now under threat.
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People gather as community leaders rejected a government proposal
to prevent future blockades affecting the Las Bambas copper mine, in
Sayhua, Peru January 17, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda
Álvaro Ossio, vice president of commercial and finance for Las Bambas, said in
a presentation at the Lima event, that the country faces a big task to benefit
from high global prices.
"The great challenge that remains for all Peruvians is to take advantage of this
great opportunity in these future trends," he said.
Peru's last big mining investments were in Anglo American's Quellaveco and
Minsur's Mina Justa of a combined $6.6 billion. Their operations starting this
year will help Peru hit annual output of 3 million tonnes of copper by 2025,
experts say.
However, other major projects like Southern Copper's Tia María, Michiquillay and
Los Chancas worth some $6.7 billion, Buenaventura's near billion dollar Trapiche
and Rio Tinto's $5 billion La Granja remain up in the air.
Not all was downbeat, however.
The world's largest gold miner, Newmont Mining, said at the event that it was
considering expanding into copper production in Peru, with a potential future
return to the canceled Conga project.
Analyst Tamayo, though, stressed recent protests against mining had become
harder to resolve.
"Now there are protests that stop mines in full operation," he said. "The mining
firms feel that the State does not support them and that the State has ceased to
be the arbiter in conflicts."
(Reporting by Marco Aquino; Editing by Adam Jourdan and Richard Pullin)
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