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Miners, smelters still divided on copper processing charges

Source: Finance.Yahoo.com | By Tom Daly and Zandi Shabalala (Reuters)
Posted on November 27th, 2020
Location: International
Industry type: Copper Smelter

Excerpt: “However, a third source involved in the talks said the problem for Freeport is that Grasberg’s concentrate will risk exceeding the maximum permitted fluorine content of 1,000 parts per million, or 0.1%, in top copper consumer China.”

FILE PHOTO: Truck is seen on a road in the Grasberg copper and gold mine operated by an Indonesian subsidiary of Freeport-McMoRan Inc, near Timika, Papua province

 

(Reuters) – Copper miners and smelters are late agreeing charges for processing concentrate for next year, three sources with knowledge of the talks said, with smelters seeking a rollover while miners are pointing to a tight spot market.

Miners pay smelters treatment and refining charges (TC/RCs) to process copper concentrate into refined metal.

The first settlement between a major copper miner and a Chinese smelter in the annual mating season is usually during negotiations in November and serves as the benchmark for the year ahead.

For 2020, it was set at $62 a tonne and 6.2 cents per lb by China’s Jiangxi Copper and Freeport-McMoRan Inc, whose Indonesian unit operates Grasberg, the world’s second largest copper mine.

However, spot TCs, which fall when the concentrate market tightens, are now at an eight-year low of $50.50 a tonne.

“Smelters are aiming for a settlement in the low $60s and miners are proposing … mid $50s,” said one source involved in the discussions, declining to be identified.

A second source, working for a miner and also declining to be named, said the two sides were more than $10 apart on charges.

Chile’s Antofagasta and Freeport are typically the first to agree charges.

However, a third source involved in the talks said the problem for Freeport is that Grasberg’s concentrate will risk exceeding the maximum permitted fluorine content of 1,000 parts per million, or 0.1%, in top copper consumer China.

“Grasberg will produce a lot more but the concentrates come with high fluorine,” said the source, adding that the chemical impurity essentially limits destinations for Grasberg’s concentrate. “That puts them in a weaker negotiating position.”

Freeport did not respond to a request for comment.

“It is a big challenge for Freeport. (It’s) hanging over the negotiations,” said CRU analyst Hamish Sampson.

Grasberg is moving from open pit to underground mining. Freeport Indonesia Chief Executive Tony Wenas said in June it would produce 160,000 tonnes of ore per day in 2021.

(Reporting by Tom Daly and Zandi Shabalala; additional reporting by Shivani Singh; editing by Pratima Desai and Marguerita Choy)


*Original article online at https://finance.yahoo.com/news/miners-smelters-still-divided-copper-172556041.html