Arcelormittal to triple iron ore production
MONROVIA: Arcelormital signed an agreement to stay for at least 25 more years in Liberia, where it will at least triple its iron ore production and invest an additional $800 million, the company’s executive chairman and Liberia’s president said.
Annual production will increase to 15 million tonnes during a first phase of expansion and could rise as high as 30 million tonnes, Arcelormital Executive Chairman Lakshmi Mital said at the signing ceremony.
The steel and mining company first signed a 25- year deal with Liberia in 2005 and shipped the first iron ore from its Yekepa mine in 2011.
It had been aiming to expand output to 15 million tonnes much sooner, but those plans were put on hold in 2014 when it declared force majeure on the expansion project because of the Ebola outbreak in West Africa.
Liberian President George Weah said production would hit 15 million tonnes within the next three years and that the government would receive a total of $65 million from Arcelormittal.
The project is expected to create 1,000 direct jobs, 2,000 temporary construction-related jobs and about 4,000 indirect jobs, Weah said.
“The government considers you an important ally in its drive to accelerate the growth of our economy under our national development plan,” Weah told Mital.
Liberia, with huge mining and agriculture potential, has atracted billions of dollars in resource investment since the end of a 1989-2003 civil war, but its infrastructure remains underdeveloped and most of its 5 million people live in poverty.
Weah said the deal, which is an amendment to the existing agreement, still needs to be approved by his cabinet and the parliament.
Arcelormital is a multinational steel manufacturing corporation headquartered in the Luxembourg City.
It was formed in 2006 from the takeover and merger of Arcelor by Indian-owned Mital Steel.