Mitsubishi to invest $888 mn in Peru copper mine
Mitsubishi Corporation plans to invest as much as 70 billion yen ($888 million) to acquire an 18.1 per cent stake in a copper mine in southern Peru, Japanese financial daily Nikkei reported on Friday.
Production at the mine - part of the Quellaveco project and majority owned by London-based Anglo American, which holds the remaining 81.9 per cent stake - is scheduled to begin in 2016.
The mine holds an estimated 10 million tonnes of copper reserves and is expected to produce 225,000 tonnes of the red metal annually.
Mitsubishi's proportional share of that output, to be sold in Japan and the rest of Asia, according to Nikkei, would be around 40,000 tonnes a year.
The Japanese corporation already operates copper mines in Chile and Peru and produces nearly 140,000 tonnes of the mineral annually, making it the Asian country's No. 1 company in that sector.
In November, Anglo American sold Mitsubishi a 24.5 per cent stake in its Chilean unit, Anglo American Sur, for 420 billion yen ($5.33 billion).
Japanese corporations have been acquiring stakes in foreign copper projects in a bid to ensure a stable supply of the metal for the Asian nation, as well as sufficient supplies for export to emerging markets.
Mitsui recently acquired mining rights in Chile, while Marubeni Corporation and Sumitomo Corporation will begin developing copper mines in that country in 2014.
Mitsubishi also announced in November that it plans to invest some 10 billion yen ($126.9 million) to acquire and develop a phosphate rock mine in northern Peru.
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