Extended lockdowns to hit copper production

Peruvian copper mine Antamina, owned by BHP and Glencore, reported on Monday 210 positive cases of coronavirus and said the date to restart operations is still uncertain.

One of the largest copper/zinc mines in the world, Antamina produced 101 million tonnes of copper in 2019.

The announcement comes after six workers at Fortuna Silver Mines’ (NYSE: FSM) Caylloma operation in southern Peru also tested positive for covid-19.

Peruvian President Martin Vizcarra has extended the country’s lockdown and travel restrictions to May 10, while the effects of a copper supply shock remain to be seen.

China, the world’s top metals consumer, boosted copper imports year-on-year in March, but still faces challenges as miners have reduced shipments or suspended operations.

Data analytics firm GlobalData forecasts copper output growth of 1.9% this year, compared to the original forecast growth rate of 3.4%.

  • On Monday, Freeport’s El Abra copper mine in Chile also announced it would scale back copper processing by 40% as global prices for the red metal plunge amid the coronavirus pandemic. The mine, located in the province of El Loa in northern Chile, is one of two copper mines operated by Freeport in South America. The world’s largest publicly traded copper producer, said on Friday it would cut its 2020 costs by 18%, or $1.3 billion, as prices for the red metal plunge.
  • Anglo American’s Los Bronces copper mine in Chile, outside the capital Santiago, saw output tumble 25% to 68,700 tonnes, battered primarily by a worsening drought in the region.
  • Grupo Mexico, the third-largest copper producer in the world through its subsidiary ASARCO, registered a net loss of $369.2 million during the first quarter of 2020 in a sharp reversal from the same period a year ago. The largest mining company in Mexico recently reduced its mining operations to comply with government orders to suspend non-essential activities.