25 Apr 2024
Tuesday 8 November 2016 - 13:21
Story Code : 238284

Iranian miner seeks up to $4 bln for copper, steel projects

Reuters- Nov 8 A private Iranian company is seeking joint venture partners to help develop copper, steel and other projects in the country, managing director Ebrahim Sadeghi of Mahan Company for Mines and Industries Development (MACMID) said on Tuesday.

MACMID has two copper mines already under development, the Chah Firuzeh mine and the Daralou mine, both of which are being developed with a conglomerate that includes state-owned National Iranian Copper Industries.

The group is seeking $600 million from one or more international joint venture partners to help develop the two copper mines and associated processing plants, each aiming to produce about 26,000 tonnes of copper a year by about 2019.

"We are looking to bring in international partners to jointly develop local deposits," Sadeghi said through an interpreter on the sidelines of a mining conference. "Iran has some of the richest deposits in the Middle East. Gold, copper zinc."

Construction of the Chah Firuzeh mine is about 20 percent complete, and Daralou is around 35 percent complete, he said.

MACMID was set up in 2013 as a private joint stock company, backed by Iran's Tourism Financial Group.

It eventually aims to put in place a range of projects, including production of steel slab and a fertiliser business, and hopes to raise $4 billion in foreign investment after having secured $1 billion from local investors, Sardeghi said.

MACMID had a mandate to use European technology only in its developments.

Sardeghi said the investment climate in Iran had improved since the lifting of a range of international sanctions in mid-January.

"The climate is not cold, the process just takes time," he said.

MACMID expected commodity prices to increase, while the copper projects would break even at prices as low as $4,000 a tonne, he said. Copper is currently above $5,000.

"In 2018, it is going to be a better market for iron ore and steel. It won't be a return to the golden age, but it won't be as bad as 2016, 2017," he added, due to capacity cuts in China and a global recovery.

(Reporting by Melanie Burton; Editing by Richard Pullin)
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