ADVERTISEMENT

BHP Stuck With Small Copper Mine as Would-Be Buyer Backs Out

BHP's $320 Million Copper Mine Sale Called Off, Chile Union Says

(Bloomberg) -- The sale of BHP Group’s smallest copper mine in Chile has been called off after the would-be buyer, EMR Capital Advisors Pty Ltd., failed to come up with the money on time.

The two parties ended their agreement for the Cerro Colorado mine, with Melbourne-based EMR unable to meet a funding deadline for the $320 million deal, a BHP official said Wednesday in a text message, confirming earlier comments by union president Marcelo Franco.

In June, BHP agreed to sell the mine for $230 million in cash, plus $40 million in proceeds from copper stocks and about $50 million depending on prices of the metal. Deutsche Bank AG had said in a report last year it could fetch as much as $800 million.

"The decision to put an end to the agreement was taken between the two parties when it was evident that the financing conditions would not be met within the deadline," the BHP official said.

BHP started the sale process in March 2017 as part of a push by the world’s biggest mining company to focus on major operations. Cerro Colorado produced 77,256 metric tons in the year through June, about one sixteenth the output from BHP’s Escondida mine, also in northern Chile.

Cerro Colorado has options that could potentially expand its lifespan for decades, the company has said. But its environmental license runs out in 2023 and after that new terms will have to be negotiated for water use.

BHP Stuck With Small Copper Mine as Would-Be Buyer Backs Out

Union leaders were told the mine will remain within its Pampa Norte division, but that all options remain open. In the lead-up to the sale, the union had expressed concern over possible job cuts.

"As BHP we will keep working to maximize the value of Cerro Colorado and its options over the long term," the company told workers on an internal statement signed by Cerro Colorado General Manager Patricio Hidalgo, a copy of which was seen by Bloomberg.

BHP advanced 2 percent in Sydney trading as of 12:31 p.m. Thursday, outpacing the 1 percent gain among an index of commodities and energy producers.

EMR said by email that “the decision to terminate the Cerro Colorado agreement was mutually agreed after it became clear that the financing conditions of the transaction would not be satisfied within this timeframe.”

To contact the reporter on this story: Laura Millan Lombrana in Santiago at lmillan4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Luzi Ann Javier at ljavier@bloomberg.net, James Attwood, Keith Gosman

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.