Bolivia nearer meeting iron ore target
La Paz, Bolivia (UPI) Feb 15, 2011 Bolivia is nearer to meeting its goal of becoming a major iron ore exporter after agreements reached with an Indian company promised to kick off the trade in March, officials said. India's Jindal Steel and Power said it will start exporting iron ore concentrate next month after its negotiators and Bolivian government officials resolved differences that had blocked a deal since last year. Most of the exports of the iron ore will be from the El Mutun mine, the firm said. "They'll be the first iron-ore exports from Bolivia," said Jindal Bolivia's communications manager Eduardo Prudencio. "One million tons will be exported during the following 12 months," he added. Jindal Managing Director Naveen Jindal earlier visited the eastern Bolivian province of Santa Cruz to inaugurate the firm's offices, which are under construction in Puerto Suarez, close to the Brazilian border. Jindal is repairing a 60-mile road to connect El Mutun with a canal waterway linking the Paraguay and Parana rivers and eventually providing access to the Atlantic Ocean. Jindal has announced plans to build a steel complex in Puerto Suarez that will eventually process 50 percent of the ore from the mine. Scientific studies say the El Mutun mine holds about 40 billion tons of mineral reserves. The company has pledged to contribute toward urban regeneration in the area. Jindal promised the regional authorities it will invest $600 million in the area over the next two years. Current plans call for steel production to begin in 2014. Bolivia's negotiations with Jindal go back to a 2007 contract that gave the Indian company rights to mine about half of El Mutun reserves but also committed Jindal to investment of $2.1 billion in the projects. Problems cropped up after disputes over reported underinvestment by Jindal and delays in the project. An $18 million performance guarantee bond was cashed by the Mining Ministry as a punitive measure against Jindal over the delays. Officials say Bolivia is also carrying on negotiations with China and South Korea over further mining deals. An estimated 50 percent of the world's known lithium reserves lie in remote parts of Bolivia's Andean high-mountain plateau, where some of the world's largest uranium deposits have also been located. Lithium, a low-density metal used in batteries, is seen as crucial to the auto industry's effort to produce hybrid and electric cars. Competing research programs at automotive companies in Europe, Japan and the United States are busy developing energy-efficient, battery-operated cars as substitutes for gasoline-fired cars. A growing global consensus on nuclear power has also ignited interest in Bolivia's uranium deposits.
earlier related report The Latin American country depends on the mining sector for nearly 15 percent of its gross domestic product but has recently seen competition from China, one of its major trade partners, gnawing into its traditional share of world markets for the metal. The latest data on Peru's production came from world leader Chile's Copper Commission, which cited figures indicating that China became the world's second largest copper producer in 2010, after Chile, overtaking the United States and Peru. Copper prices spiked this month after constant highs in January and last year and traders predicted tight supplies could push the prices way beyond $10,000 a ton, perhaps as high as $11,000 a ton. The global copper trade is thriving on the strength of short supplies and rising demand. Last month China's state-owned Nonferrous Metal Mining announced it would invest more than $450 million in new production capacity in the Hubei province. Latin American neighbor and world leader Chile's copper production fell 1.6 percent in December and Zambia faced disruptions in output, leading to trade anxieties. China produced 197,000 tons more in 2010 than in 2009, reaching a total production in the year of 1.25 million tons. With that output data, China advanced over the United States (which produced 1.13 million tons) and Peru (1.19 million tons). Cochilco said the trend could continue through 2011 and the Asian giant could produce 1.42 million tons of copper during the year. Chile is likely to continue its dominance of the world copper market with 5.84 million tons, accounting for 32 percent of global production. The commission said the trend would likely continue through 2012, The Santiago Times said, citing the commission's data. Peru depends heavily on export revenues and despite recent success in building a market-oriented economy the country faces high poverty rates of more than 36 percent, a third of them in the category of extremely poor citizens with scant resources and opportunities for economic betterment. The government last year initiated plans to develop the mining sector and make commodities exports more profitable. Plans were put in place to develop gold and zinc mines and redress the trade balance with the United States, China, Chile and Brazil with more processed merchandise and manufactured exports rather than just raw materials. However, the government has struggled to attract foreign investors to the country's sluggish economy.
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Peru faces copper competition from China Lima (UPI) Feb 14, 2011 Peru is facing growing competition from China for its share of the global copper ore market, which is at the risk of shrinking amid aggressive mining and marketing by East Asia's economic giant. The Latin American country depends on the mining sector for nearly 15 percent of its gross domestic product but has recently seen competition from China, one of its major trade partners, gnawing ... read more |
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