ADVERTISEMENT

Glencore Feud Deepens as Zambia Moves to Revoke Copper Mines

Glencore Feud Deepens as Zambia Moves to Revoke Copper Mines

(Bloomberg) --

Zambia raised the stakes in its fight with Glencore Plc, threatening to strip the company of its copper mines in the southern African country.

Glencore said last week it needs to close shafts at Mopani Copper Mines Plc due to falling metal prices, disrupted logistics and travel restrictions related to the coronavirus pandemic. It pressed ahead with the move in defiance of the government, which described the closure as illegal.

“They’ve been given seven days to show why their license should not be canceled or revoked,” Mines Ministry Permanent Secretary Barnaby Mulenga said by phone. A Glencore spokesman declined to comment, though the company said earlier Tuesday it was in talks with the government about a way forward.

The threat from Zambia to cancel the mining license of Glencore’s local unit significantly escalates the conflict at a time when both the commodity trader and country are battling slumping copper prices as the coronavirus pandemic hits demand.

Glencore Feud Deepens as Zambia Moves to Revoke Copper Mines

Zambia has a track record for carrying through on its threats. A year ago, the country placed the local unit of Vedanta Resources Plc in provisional liquidation, accusing the company of skipping taxes and lying about expansion plans. Zambia is the continent’s second-biggest copper producer.

Mopani didn’t give required notice to place operations under care and maintenance, state-owned ZNBC TV reported Tuesday, citing a government letter to Mopani Chief Executive Officer Nathan Bullock. The government intends to revoke the licenses for both Mopani’s Nkana and Mufulira mines, ZNBC said.

Related Coverage
  • Protesters Demand Glencore Reopen Zambian Copper Mines
  • Glencore to Shut Mopani Copper Mines Despite Zambia Push Back

Glencore has struggled to make its Zambian business profitable, but the mines have been central to its plans to turn around the fortunes of the giant African copper and cobalt business that also includes mines across the border, in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

The company is in the process of spending billions of dollars at Mopani to sink new shafts. Once fully up and running, the mines should produce about 140,000 tons of copper a year, compared with just 51,000 tons last year. The mine had been expected to produce between 50,000 tons and 70,000 tons this year.

Glencore said last week that it will continue paying its permanent employees, excluding management, and they will have continued access to health care and other services. The company’s contractors will receive payments exceeding those it’s legally obliged to make, it said.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.