BHP steps up efforts to win neck and neck battle for Ecuador’s copper riches

World’s largest miner BHP (ASX, NYSE:BHP) took a key step this week towards increasing its presence in Ecuador, the new darling of copper prospectors, by signing an earn-in and joint venture deal with Canada’s Luminex Resources (TSX-V:LR).

The Vancouver-based miner, which has already enlisted big names such as Anglo American and First Quantum for its other three Ecuadorian assets, has given BHP the right to own up to a 70% stake the Tarqui copper project.

Luminex also committed to work exclusively with BHP to negotiate and complete a binding agreement for the partnership over the next three months.

In return, BHP will invest $75 million in exploration and pay Luminex $7 million in cash.

BHP, already the world’s second-biggest listed copper miner, has been actively looking to increase its exposure to the metal.

The Australian mining giant, already the world’s second-biggest listed copper miner, has been looking to increase its exposure to the metal and has targeted Ecuador as a key jurisdiction for that growth.

In September, BHP bought a 6.1% stake in SolGold (LON, TSX:SOLG) for $35 million, tightening its grip on the Cascabel project, believed to have the potential to become one of the largest copper-gold assets ever discovered.

The move pushed Australia’s largest gold producer, Newcrest Mining (ASX: NCM), to increase its holding in SolGold and so consolidate its position as the explorer’s top shareholder.

“Highly prospective” location

Ecuador has gained ground as a mining investment destination in the past two years thanks to a revised regulatory framework and a major investor engagement campaign that attracted around 420 applications for concessions in less than a year.

Canada’s Lundin Gold (TSX:LUG) is set to begin operations at its Fruta del Norte gold mine at the end of the year, and other multinational mining companies are looking at Ecuador with interest. Dundee Precious Metals will begin investing in the Andean nation through junior miners already operating there, while Barrick Gold’s chief executive Mark Bristow is said to have visited the country several times.

Existing and future projects risk delays and potential halts due to red tape and growing local opposition to the extraction of the country’s resources.

Existing and future projects, however, risk delays and potential halts due to red tape and growing local opposition to the extraction of the country’s resources.

According to the latest report by Fitch Solutions Macro Research, the ongoing expansion of mining exploration in the South American country is raising the risk of tensions between companies and the local population.

In two landmark cases last year, Ecuadorian courts sided with rural and indigenous communities who argued the national government had failed to inform them it was setting aside parts of their territories for mineral exploitation. That, Fitch notes, is a right protected by the 2008 Constitution.

As mining projects face headwinds from rising tensions, investors’ courage will be tested, the analysts conclude, which could thwart Ecuador’s plan to attract $3.7 billion in mining investments in the next two years, up from $270 million in 2018.

The government is in the final days of completing a new policy that will mirror that of countries with greater mining experience, such as Chile and Peru, in order to streamline procedures and increase Ecuador’s competitiveness.

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