Calgary Herald

Teck Resources doubles down on $5B Chile copper project

Price dip not a worry as Vancouver firm bets on demand surge from e-vehicles

- GABRIEL FRIEDMAN Financial Post gfriedman@postmedia.com

Teck Resources Ltd. is buying out a minority partner in a major copper project in Chile at a cost that could reach as high as $262.5 million.

The total price tag, however, will depend on copper prices — often considered a barometer for global macroecono­mic growth because it is used in so many products — and which at the moment are sliding as the U.S. and China slap tariffs on one another, and fears of a trade war escalate.

“A company ’s decision to build or not build (a mine) — these are longterm forward-looking decisions,” said Alex Terentiew, an analyst at BMO Capital Markets who monitors Teck.

Terentiew said copper prices, which stood around US$3.06 per pound on Thursday, are not dropping off in a worrying way. In a note, he forecast a “skew of risk to the upside” for copper prices, based on a growing need in China for concentrat­es.

Under the deal announced Wednesday, Vancouver-based Teck increases its stake in Quebrada Blanca Phase 2: an open pit copper mine in northern Chile’s high desert expected to produce 300,000 tonnes of copper per year for its first five years.

Teck’s shares on the Toronto Stock Exchange rose three per cent to $34. Copper rose 1.4 per cent on Thursday as concerns over the prospect of a trade war between China and the U.S. eased.

The company has said it hopes to complete permitting and sanctionin­g for the project later this year. If built, at an estimated cost exceeding $5 billion, it would offset production declines at Quebrada Blanca Phase I — which dropped off 32 per cent in 2017 to 23,400 tonnes — and are expected to halve again later this year.

Copper, one of four business units at Teck besides steelmakin­g coal, oil and zinc, is a priority for the company.

“The big opportunit­y for us is to take the very strong cash flows from coal and from zinc and to deploy those into the copper growth projects,” Andrew Golding, senior vice-president of corporate developmen­t, said at a CIBC conference in Whistler in January.

Under the deal, it is buying out a 13.5-per-cent interest in Quebrada Blanca held by Inversione­s Mineras, S.A., a private Chilean company, thereby increasing its ownership to 90 per cent.

The deal has three stages: First, Teck pays a $52.5 million cash deposit, followed by a $60 million payment upon final approval of the social and environmen­tal impact assessment, and then an additional $50 million payment when copper production starts at the mine — the date of which has not yet been set.

Plus, if copper prices exceed $3.15 per pound for the first three years, Teck could see an additional $100 million.

ENAMI, a state agency in Chile, owns the remaining 10-per-cent interest. BMO analyst Terentiew said past comments by Teck chief executive Don Lindsey suggest the company will sell some of its stake to reduce its risk profile.

“Whether they sell down to 70 or to 60 per cent, obviously it all depends on the partner, what the partner’s willing to pay” and other factors, he said.

At the Whistler conference in January, Golding said the company is bullish on copper in the medium and long term, and not just because it is used in electric vehicle batteries.

“If electric vehicles do take off, we see that as being the icing on the cake,” he said. “The demand is not dependent on the battery technology in the way it might be for cobalt, lithium, or nickel — really, the copper will be going in to the cars themselves, and into the charging infrastruc­ture that would have to be strengthen­ed around the world.”

Capital Economics, a U.K.-based research house, sees the electrific­ation of vehicles as a “gamechange­r” for demand for copper, lithium and cobalt.

“A pick-up in electric vehicle sales could have significan­t repercussi­ons for metals demand and, potentiall­y, prices,” said Simona Gambarini, commoditie­s economist at Capital Economics.

 ?? TECK COMINCO. ?? The Andacollo mine is located in central Chile. Vancouver-based Teck is increasing its stake in Quebrada Blanca Phase 2 to 90 per cent. The open pit copper mine in northern Chile’s high desert is expected to produce 300,000 tonnes of copper per year for its first five years.
TECK COMINCO. The Andacollo mine is located in central Chile. Vancouver-based Teck is increasing its stake in Quebrada Blanca Phase 2 to 90 per cent. The open pit copper mine in northern Chile’s high desert is expected to produce 300,000 tonnes of copper per year for its first five years.

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