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Congo lifts ban on raw metal exports by Chinese joint venture

2017-10-12 10:46:53

Reuters

  Congo's government has lifted an order requiring a joint venture of Chinese investors to stop exporting raw copper and cobalt, the mines ministry and the company said on Wednesday.

 
  Democratic Republic of Congo's mines minister Martin Kabwelulu last month ordered Sicomines, one of the country's largest copper producers, to only export processed metals because they command higher values on international markets.
 
  Kabwelulu said high-value exports were needed to pay off billions of dollars in infrastructure and mining investments by Sicomines' majority shareholders Sinohydro Corp and China Railway Group Limited as part of a minerals-for-infrastructure deal first signed in 2007.
 
  "Everything has returned to normal," he said.
 
  Kabwelulu's chief of staff, Valery Mukasa, confirmed that the order had been lifted, but declined to elaborate.
 
  Reports of the measure on Monday pushed copper prices higher because of its potential to reduce global supply.
 
  Sicomines launched operations in November 2015 and almost immediately became one of the top copper producers in Congo, Africa's top miner of the metal.