Berliner Boersenzeitung - Central America's biggest mine faces closure over tax spat

EUR -
AED 4.017226
AFN 73.945996
ALL 98.434639
AMD 423.670219
ANG 1.975659
AOA 992.543373
ARS 1066.103587
AUD 1.625617
AWG 1.971421
AZN 1.859789
BAM 1.955201
BBD 2.213382
BDT 130.999871
BGN 1.955779
BHD 0.412285
BIF 3181.196431
BMD 1.093715
BND 1.429649
BOB 7.57468
BRL 6.121962
BSD 1.096244
BTN 92.071796
BWP 14.597262
BYN 3.587535
BYR 21436.813352
BZD 2.209683
CAD 1.499789
CDF 3147.711693
CHF 0.940706
CLF 0.036994
CLP 1020.797478
CNY 7.731255
CNH 7.739641
COP 4631.32509
CRC 566.016264
CUC 1.093715
CUP 28.983447
CVE 110.231233
CZK 25.350341
DJF 195.206634
DKK 7.458994
DOP 65.938596
DZD 145.49134
EGP 53.04507
ERN 16.405725
ETB 133.263646
FJD 2.433242
FKP 0.832928
GBP 0.83673
GEL 2.975344
GGP 0.832928
GHS 17.484644
GIP 0.832928
GMD 74.91705
GNF 9461.236724
GTQ 8.478403
GYD 229.349744
HKD 8.499653
HNL 27.167799
HRK 7.43618
HTG 144.534404
HUF 399.064091
IDR 17140.482219
ILS 4.115819
IMP 0.832928
INR 91.834325
IQD 1436.060098
IRR 46031.732371
ISK 148.493418
JEP 0.832928
JMD 173.213773
JOD 0.775117
JPY 163.077823
KES 141.439548
KGS 93.18861
KHR 4456.594083
KMF 492.117074
KPW 984.34285
KRW 1477.144121
KWD 0.335213
KYD 0.91352
KZT 537.535339
LAK 24206.363645
LBP 97890.477724
LKR 321.088706
LRD 211.575189
LSL 19.31583
LTL 3.229456
LVL 0.661578
LYD 5.243298
MAD 10.754106
MDL 19.320728
MGA 5009.214179
MKD 61.616407
MMK 3552.343549
MNT 3716.443409
MOP 8.778711
MRU 43.34393
MUR 50.431327
MVR 16.793981
MWK 1900.88295
MXN 21.282255
MYR 4.696962
MZN 69.686021
NAD 19.316183
NGN 1773.885419
NIO 40.250355
NOK 11.78573
NPR 147.312181
NZD 1.797321
OMR 0.421058
PAB 1.096264
PEN 4.083549
PGK 4.297231
PHP 62.623964
PKR 304.474864
PLN 4.29387
PYG 8545.226117
QAR 3.997475
RON 4.975852
RSD 117.037377
RUB 106.090882
RWF 1475.221125
SAR 4.106786
SBD 9.05803
SCR 15.286834
SDG 657.814053
SEK 11.373717
SGD 1.429502
SHP 0.832928
SLE 24.988437
SLL 22934.650375
SOS 626.496632
SRD 34.773583
STD 22637.691614
SVC 9.592062
SYP 2747.991596
SZL 19.311731
THB 36.682908
TJS 11.691525
TMT 3.83894
TND 3.365469
TOP 2.56159
TRY 37.459923
TTD 7.431622
TWD 35.282586
TZS 2980.373072
UAH 45.150044
UGX 4028.765885
USD 1.093715
UYU 45.136586
UZS 13999.552074
VEF 3962039.925446
VES 40.995091
VND 27184.285503
VUV 129.848038
WST 3.059627
XAF 655.744138
XAG 0.03586
XAU 0.000418
XCD 2.95582
XDR 0.815535
XOF 652.417258
XPF 119.331742
YER 273.838854
ZAR 19.293947
ZMK 9844.751714
ZMW 28.967597
ZWL 352.175773
  • RYCEF

    0.0700

    6.97

    +1%

  • CMSC

    -0.1200

    24.52

    -0.49%

  • RBGPF

    63.3500

    63.35

    +100%

  • SCS

    0.2500

    13.03

    +1.92%

  • RIO

    -0.3100

    66.35

    -0.47%

  • NGG

    -0.2700

    65.63

    -0.41%

  • RELX

    0.0700

    46.71

    +0.15%

  • GSK

    2.2200

    40.24

    +5.52%

  • BTI

    0.2600

    35.48

    +0.73%

  • CMSD

    -0.1715

    24.68

    -0.69%

  • BP

    -0.0500

    31.98

    -0.16%

  • VOD

    0.0700

    9.73

    +0.72%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.22

    +0.45%

  • AZN

    0.6350

    77.505

    +0.82%

  • BCC

    0.3700

    142.39

    +0.26%

  • BCE

    -0.2000

    33.31

    -0.6%

Central America's biggest mine faces closure over tax spat
Central America's biggest mine faces closure over tax spat / Photo: Luis ACOSTA - AFP

Central America's biggest mine faces closure over tax spat

Rising up through the lush vegetation of Panama's Caribbean coast, a 125-meter chimney serves as a beacon for helicopters approaching the largest mine in Central America, which faces closure next week over a contract dispute.

Text size:

Gigantic 400-tonne trucks slowly wind around the stepped slopes of a massive gash in the earth one kilometer wide, the ochre and grey of the copper mine standing in stark contrast to the verdant jungle surrounding it.

The activity could grind to an expensive halt in a matter of days.

Canadian mining giant First Quantum Minerals has until next Wednesday to sign a new contract with the government, which is demanding the company multiply the taxes it pays by 10.

If the parties do not agree, the disagreement could halt the work of a mining project considered the largest private investment in Panama's history, contributing four percent of the country's GDP and 75 percent of export revenues.

"We have been given a deadline to sign the new contract by December 14, to accept the new terms," First Quantum's manager in Panama, Keith Green, who is Scottish, told AFP.

"We intend to reach an agreement, but negotiations are a bit deadlocked," he added.

First Quantum, one of the largest copper miners in the world, began commercial copper production at the site in Donoso in 2019, through its subsidiary Minera Panama.

It has spent $10 billion on earthworks, construction buildings to house more than 7,000 employees, the purchase of heavy machinery, a power plant, a port for deep-draft merchant ships, access roads, and re-forestation plans.

- 'Fair income' -

President Laurentino Cortizo in January announced plans to toughen the conditions of the mining license, with a new contract that would oblige the mining company to pay "at least" $375 million to Panama annually -- ten times what it is currently paying.

"Panama has the inalienable right to receive fair income from the extraction of its mineral resources, because the copper is Panamanian," he said.

This mine is "the biggest in Central America," producing 300,000 tons of copper concentrate per year, said Green.

The deposit, discovered in 1968, lies on the Caribbean coast, 240 kilometers by road from the capital Panama City.

The company, listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange, built the Punta Rincon International Port next to the mine to transport the copper by ship, due to a lack of roads connecting the Colon port, 40 kilometers (25 miles) away.

Despite the uncertainty over the mine's future, activity has not slowed and the company has continued to invest in the site.

A new 200-tonne drilling rig -- as tall as a three-story building -- was inaugurated in a ceremony on Tuesday, causing heavy air traffic.

Helicopter pilot Oldemar Arauz explains that most officials visiting the mine prefer the one-hour air trip to the four-hour drive on a narrow road from the capital.

The drilling rig, made in the United States by the Swedish company Epiroc, cost $6 million, and was transported to the mine in 10 trucks.

"Latin America has 200 of these drills, 50 in Chile and now three in Panama," said Epiroc's Latin America manager Hans Traub.

The drill was assembled by Chilean engineer Alex Gonzalez, who previously worked in Chuquicamata, the world's largest open pit copper mine, situated in the Atacama desert, which has been operating since 1915.

Central America does not have the same mining tradition seen further south. Mining is illegal in Costa Rica and El Salvador, and while there is much potential for growth in Panama, the industry's future is now hanging in the balance.

(Y.Berger--BBZ)