Congo halts court case against China Moly’s Tenke mine
Congo’s state miner Gecamines has halted its court case against China Molybdenum, which last month was stripped of control of its giant copper and cobalt Tenke Fungurume mine in the country, as officials seeks a solution to a dispute between the companies.
The Congolese government announced in August it had formed a commission to reassess the reserves and resources at the mine to “fairly lay claim to (its) rights”. Several Gecamines officials were appointed to the commission as the DRC claims it is owed billions of dollars.
In February, a local court named a temporary administrator to run Tenke Fungurume for six months after Gecamines, a minority shareholder in the mine, accused China Moly of refusing to share technical information about the project, including the size of its mineral reserves.
Talks between China Moly chief executive Sun Ruiwen and Prime Minister Sama Lukonde Kyenge in. the past weeks, seemed to have ironed out some issues.
Congo’s government said on Tuesday it has laid out “a road map to exit the crisis, along with a timeline, in order for the two sides to come to an agreement,” Communications Minister Patrick Muyaya posted on the ministry’s Twitter feed. “In the meantime, the judicial procedure remains suspended in order to restore a peaceful climate of exchange and harmony between the two parties.”
China Moly acquired its controlling stake in Tenke Fungurume in 2016 for $2.65 billion from US miner Freeport-McMoRan (NYSE: FCX). In 2019, it spent another $1.14 billion to boost its holding to 80%.
The DRC has the world’s largest reserves of cobalt, a key ingredient for electric vehicles batteries, and the Tenke mine is one of its largest employers, with about 7,000 workers and contractors.
Tenke Fungurume, Congo’s second-biggest copper mine, produced 209,100 tonnes of the red metal and 18,500 tonnes of cobalt last year. The operation is slated to yield much as 267,000 tonnes of copper and 20,500 tonnes of cobalt in 2022.