Atalaya Mining (LON: ATYM) has restarted its Riotinto copper mine in Spain after local authorities in Andalucía determined that mining operations supplying other essential industries should remain open.
The Cyprus-headquartered company
had closed the mine on March 30 in response to the Spanish
government’s royal decree, which ordered the suspension of non-essential
business operations, including mining.
On Friday, however, Andalucía’s
mining department informed Atalaya that the definition of essential industry had
been extended to include mining.
The company said strict health and safety procedures were still mandatory for workers on site.
“Associated to these measures,
Atalaya will maximize the stockpiles available on site, defer all non-essential
activities and focus on the production of concentrates to fulfil national and
international commitments to supply other industries,” it said.
Atalaya, which reopened the legendary Riotinto mine in 2016, has so far kept its 2020 guidance of between 55,000 and 58,000 tonnes of copper, a significant increase from the 42,114 tonnes it churned out last year.
The miner also has a brownfield project in sight, Proyecto Touro, which is located in northwest Spain.
The news come on the same day Fitch
Ratings cut its short-term price assumptions for certain metal, including copper,
as a result of considerably lower economic activity.
Unprecedented lockdowns in much of
Europe, the United States and elsewhere are significantly reducing commodity
consumption, the rating agency said.
Fitch now expects global growth to
contract by 1.9% in 2020, translating into a fall in global copper demand of 6%
from last year.
Although production disruptions in Chile,
Peru, Mexico and Canada will remove significant volumes from the market, Fitch still
expects copper to be in oversupply. As a result, it has reduced price
assumptions to $5,300 a tonne this year and $5,800 per tonne in 2021.