Ivanhoe Mines (TSX: IVN; US-OTC: IVAPF) announced today that its Kamoa-Kakula joint venture in the Democratic Republic of the Congo has exceeded the upper end of its annual copper production guidance, with more than 100,000 tonnes of copper concentrate produced year-to-date as of December 22.
The production figure is reported on a 100%-project basis. Ivanhoe has a 39.6% interest in the Kamoa JV and is the project operator. Zijin Mining Group (39.6%), Crystal River Global (0.8%) and the DRC government (20%) are its other stakeholders.
Kamoa-Kakula first began producing copper concentrates from the Phase 1, 3.8 million tonne per annum capacity concentrator plant in May 2021. It subsequently reached commercial production on July 1, and is expected to produce 200,000 tonnes of copper per year.
Construction of the Phase 2 concentrator, which would be a “carbon copy” of the Phase 1 plant and double annual production, is underway and is about 70% complete, according to Ivanhoe’s latest update.
Ivanhoe’s production guidance for 2021 was set at 92,500-100,000 tonnes, which was originally projected to be 80,000-95,000 tonnes. The annual production guidance was also previously increased in November, reflecting the successful completion of ramp-up of the Phase 1 concentrator.
“Kamoa Copper’s performance marks an excellent end to what has truly been a banner year for Ivanhoe Mines,” Robert Friedland, Ivanhoe’s founder and executive co-chairman, commented in a news release.
Also Read: Ivanhoe’s Kamoa-Kakula yields profit in first full production quarter
“We would like to extend heartfelt congratulations to the team at Kamoa-Kakula, who consistently exceeded expectations during the construction and development of the world’s newest world-scale copper mine, and have continued that outperformance as we have moved through ramp-up and into full production,” he said.
Friedland said the Phase 2 expansion remains “significantly ahead of schedule,” and the company is well on its way to doubling annual copper production to approximately 400,000 tonnes starting early in the second quarter of 2022.
So far in December, Ivanhoe has seen feed grades in excess of 6% copper, and recoveries have also been exceeding its design recovery of 86%, which, according to Friedland, bodes well for the company’s ability to efficiently ramp-up future expansions at Kamoa-Kakula.
The Ivanhoe management team now envisions the Phase 3 concentrator to enter production by the end of 2024.
Through planned phased expansions, the Kamoa-Kakula underground operation is positioned to become one of the largest copper producers in the world, with peak annual copper production of more than 800,000 tonnes.
Be the first to comment on "Ivanhoe’s Kamoa exceeds annual copper guidance"