Ir para conteúdo
Criar Novo...

Rio Tinto’s Simandou mine may come with costly refinery twist


Redator

Posts Recomendados

  • REDATOR

Rio Tinto (ASX: RIO) may be forced to make expensive downstream investments in Guinea as the military-led government pushes for local refining tied to the giant Simandou iron ore project.

Authorities in the West African nation, which seized power in 2021, have demanded that miners present firm plans to build domestic processing facilities. Officials argue that smelters and refineries are essential for Guinea to capture more value from its resources and to drive broader economic development.

The policy echoes a broader resource-nationalism trend across Africa, where governments are pressing companies to process minerals locally. In Guinea, the world’s second-largest bauxite producer, the government has already cancelled agreements with some miners, including Emirates Global Aluminium, over slow progress building alumina refineries.

Guinea’s minister of planning and international cooperation, Ismael Nabe, said the strategy is clear: ore mined in the country must also be processed there. “We want to build a refinery in Guinea. That’s our game plan,” Nabe told the Australian Financial Review. “If Baowu comes to Guinea, they will build a refinery before shipping it out of the country”.

The Simandou is divided into four blocks. Winning Consortium Simandou, backed by Chinese firms including steelmaker China Baowu Steel Group, controls blocks 1 and 2. Rio Tinto and Chinese state-owned Chinalco control blocks 3 and 4.

Nabe compared Guinea’s ambitions to Western Australia’s iron ore mining boom decades ago, , stressing that mining revenue should also support agriculture, education, and infrastructure.

Despite tighter regulations, Guinea’s bauxite exports rose 36% to a record 99.8 million tonnes in the first half of 2025, fuelled by Chinese demand.

The country exported over 130 million tonnes last year and holds reserves estimated at 7.4 billion tonnes, according to the US Geological Service.

World’s highest grade ore

Simandou is expected to become the world’s largest and highest-grade new iron ore mine, eventually producing 120 million tonnes of premium ore annually. First ore is scheduled for November.

Rio Tinto first secured an exploration license for Simandou in 1997. but political instability has slowed progress. The project has outlasted two coups, four heads of state, and three presidential elections.

Development includes a 600-kilometre rail line linking the Simandou mountains to a new deep-water port on Guinea’s Atlantic coast. Rio Tinto will operate one of the two mines feeding the project.

Link para o comentário
Compartilhar em outros sites

Participe da Conversa

Você pode postar agora e se cadastrar mais tarde. Cadastre-se Agora para publicar com Sua Conta.
Observação: sua postagem exigirá aprovação do moderador antes de ficar visível.

Visitante
Responder

×   Você colou conteúdo com formatação.   Remover formatação

  Apenas 75 emoticons são permitidos.

×   Seu link foi incorporado automaticamente.   Exibir como um link em vez disso

×   Seu conteúdo anterior foi restaurado.   Limpar Editor

×   Você não pode colar imagens diretamente. Carregar ou inserir imagens do URL.

  • 📊 Trading Hub

    Resumo rápido de mercados em tempo real
    Carregando...
  • 📟 Forex Terminal

    • Carregando dados do mercado...
    🔎 Ver dados completos
  • 📅 Próximo Evento no Radar

    Carregando...




    ×
    ×
    • Criar Novo...

    Informação Importante

    Ao utilizar este site, você concorda com nossos Termos de Uso de Uso e Política de Privacidade

    Pesquisar em
    • Mais opções...
    Encontrar resultados que...
    Encontrar resultados em...

    Write what you are looking for and press enter or click the search icon to begin your search