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Picture: REUTERS
Picture: REUTERS

Santiago — Anglo American will scrap its next big copper project if studies indicate the plan could harm nearby glaciers or there is  major opposition from local communities in Chile, a top executive says.

The London-based company will file for environmental approval of the $3bn project to increase production at its Los Bronces mine during the third quarter, Henni Faul, who heads the miner’s copper business, said in an interview. The project is sensitive because of its proximity to Andean glaciers and the Chilean capital.

“All of our data proves we can mine that resource without doing any damage to the glaciers and without affecting the ground water,” he said at the company’s offices in Santiago ahead of the Cesco Week mining conference. “We will not mine it if there are any other indications; we will not take the project forward.”

The Los Bronces project is part of Anglo American’s plan to expand its portfolio of copper assets organically, Faul said. In 2018, the company started construction of the $5bn Quellaveco mine in Peru, one of the few large copper mines being built at the moment.

Production at Los Bronces — the largest copper mine operated by the globe-straddling company — will decline in five years as ore grades decrease. The output expansion at the site, which has been mined for more than  150 years, could take annual production from 369,500 tonnes in 2018  to about 400,000 tonnes. The company plans to use new technology to increase efficiency and to dig underground tunnels to avoid impact on the nearby glaciers.

“We’ve been working on this for six years and we trust we have the best scientific input,” Faul said of the Los Bronces plans.

About 80% of South America’s glaciers are in Chile, and they cover about 3% of the country’s land area. Rising temperatures combined with mining activity have sped up the melting of Andean glaciers, Francisco Ferrando, a geography professor at University of Chile in Santiago, said in June.

The Juncal Norte and Olivares Alfa glaciers, about 4,000m above sea level and close to Los Bronces and Codelco’s Andina mine, are melting at a faster pace than others further away, he said.

Time frame

Faul expects it will take about three years to obtain the necessary permits for the project, including the environmental license. Project development would take four years, and ramp up a further five years. A lot could happen during that time, especially as glacier protection and the impact of mining on the delicate Andean environment are being discussed in Chile’s Congress.

The two mines are just about 65km from Santiago, home to more than 5-million people, about a third of the Chilean population. Developments around Los Bronces and the glaciers nearby are closely watched by local communities and large environmental groups such as Greenpeace, which opposes industrial and mining activities on or under glaciers.

In 2018, Codelco announced a re-design of a planned expansion at Andina that would have involved mining on six rock glaciers. The new plan will move mining activities away from glaciers following direct orders from Codelco CEO Nelson Pizarro not to work near the glaciers, the mine’s sustainability manager Jorge Sanhueza said at the time.

Anglo wants to start discussions about its Los Bronces plans with local communities during the second quarter, Faul said. But the project will not happen if there is  significant opposition.

“If the public protests against it, we can’t take that forward,” Faul said. “We can’t force anyone’s arm.”

Bloomberg 

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