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Freeport Seeks Permit for $7.5 Billion Mine Expansion

SANTIAGO, March 19 (Reuters) - U.S. miner Freeport-McMoRan has begun the ​process of obtaining an environmental permit for a $7.5 billion ‌expansion of its El Abra copper mine in Chile, the company said on Thursday.

The project is a joint venture between the company and Chilean ​state-owned copper giant Codelco (COBRE.UL).

"This is a very significant project, not ​only in terms of the investment, but also in ⁠terms of the additional production," the firm's manager in Chile ​Mario Larenas told reporters at a press conference.

The expansion aims to ​increase the mine's production to approximately 300,000 metric tons of copper per year, he added.

The executive declined to comment on a question over Codelco's capacity ​to finance its share of the project.

CHILEAN GOVERNMENT WELCOMES EXPANSION

Freeport ​announced its intended El Abra expansion, which it had postponed for years, in ‌mid-2024. ⁠The project involves the construction of a concentrator and a desalination plant, and is expected to start operations in the coming decade.

Freeport owns 51% of El Abra, which produced 91,400 tons of ​copper in 2025, ​with the remainder ⁠held by Codelco.

Chile's Mining Minister Daniel Mas welcomed Freeport's decision, saying the company expects the permit ​process to take about three years and emphasizing ​that companies ⁠must comply with environmental laws.

"We have to go through all the compliance steps, and I understand that in a few months' or ⁠years' ​time, the companies will decide whether to ​proceed with the investment phase," he told reporters after meeting with company executives.

Reporting by ​Fabian Cambero; Editing by Andrew Heavens, Cassandra Garrison and Jan Harvey

Source: Reuters


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