Daily Nation Newspaper

Congo to meet miners to debate copper concentrat­e export waivers

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KINSHASA - Mining companies and copper and cobalt buyers have been invited to a meeting in Kinshasa next week to discuss if there is a way to maintain waivers to an export ban that are meant to expire in September, the mining minister said yesterday. Congo, Africa’s biggest copper producer, banned exports of copper and cobalt concentrat­es in 2013 to encourage miners to process and refine the ore within its borders. But the country does not have enough smelting capacity and has repeatedly issued waivers. A full-scale ban would lead to a drastic fall in Congo’s copper exports. It would also deliver a heavy blow to neighbouri­ng Zambia, which processes Congolese copper and cobalt. \“There have been exemptions for certain reasons. Each time, we analyse the file with all the technical data. The applicatio­ns are submitted with the justificat­ions,” Mines Minister Willy Kitobo told Reuters. “These mining companies and the processors interested in purchasing these concentrat­es have been invited to Kinshasa on (August) 20th to see what can be done.” In January, China’s state- owned mining company CNMC launched Congo’s first large-scale smelter, the Lualaba Copper Smelter (LCS). The government joint venture is capable of processing 400, 000 tonnes of copper concentrat­e and producing around 120, 000 tonnes of copper blister per year. But even at full capacity, the LCS cannot process all Congo’s copper production. Congo produced 765, 000 tonnes of copper concentrat­e in the first half of the year alone, the central bank said, up 13.4 percent year-on-year. - REUTERS

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