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Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. T.IVN

Alternate Symbol(s):  IVPAF

Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. is a Canada-based mining, development, and exploration company. It is focused on the mining, development and exploration of minerals and precious metals from its property interests located primarily in Africa. Its projects include Kamoa-Kakula Complex, Western Foreland, Kipushi and Platreef. The Kamoa-Kakula Complex project is a stratiform copper deposit with adjacent prospective exploration areas within the Central African Copperbelt, approximately 25 kilometers (kms) west of the town of Kolwezi and approximately 270 kms west of the provincial capital of Lubumbashi. The 17 licenses in the Western Foreland cover a combined area of 2,407 square kilometers to the north, south and west of the Kamoa-Kakula Copper Complex. The Kipushi Project lies adjacent to the town of Kipushi and 30 kms southwest of the provincial capital of Lubumbashi. Its Platreef project is situated approximately eight km from Mokopane and 280 km northeast of Johannesburg, South Africa.


TSX:IVN - Post by User

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Post by donger15on Feb 10, 2020 4:44pm
196 Views
Post# 30670089

Mining.com article

Mining.com article

Chile’s copper output down in 2019 on declining grades

Chile’s Ministro Hales mine. (Courtesy of Codelco via Flickr.)

Copper production in 2019 in Chile, the world’s No. 1 producer of the metal, dropped by 44,000 tonnes compared to 2018, amid a perfect storm of falling ore grades at the largest deposits, water scarcity and operational issues.

Cochilco, the country’s copper commission, said Codelco, the state-owned giant, was the miner most affected by aging mines as its production declined by 5.6% in 2019 to about 100,000 tonnes. The impact of such a fall at a national level was offset by results at other mines, such as Barrick’s Zaldvar, Lundin’s Candelaria and Antofagasta’s Centinela.

CODELCO CONTRIBUTED THE MOST TO THE FALL, PRODUCING 44,000 TONNES LESS THAN IN 2018, AS IT GRAPPLES WITH FALLING GRADES AT ITS AGING MINES

Overall, the world’s largest copper producer churned out 1,706 million tonnes of copper, the lowest level since 2008, when it generated only 1.55 million tonnes. At that time, the giant Ministro Hales mine, which contributes between 180,000 and 200,000 tonnes of copper a year, had not yet begun operations.

Another mine that experienced a sharp drop in production was BHP’s Escondida, the world’s largest copper mine, which ended 2019 with a production of 1,188 million tonnes, or 4.4% less than in 2018.  

The biggest output increase, in turn, was registered at Antofagasta’s Centinela mine, which churned out 25.8% more copper than in 2018.  

Codelco, which hands over all of its profits to the state, is in the midst of an ambitious, 10-year, $39 billion investment drive to open new projects and overhaul older mines.

The company holds vast copper deposits, accounting for 10% of the world’s known proven and probable reserves and about 11% of the global annual copper output with 1.8 million tonnes of production. The metal accounts for up to 15% of the country’s gross domestic product.

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