Resourcing Tomorrow: copper deficit a focus of discussion

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The transition to clean energy is driving demand for copper to levels that will soon no longer be satisfied by existing and planned production, Mark Bristow, CEO and president of Barrick stated in his keynote address at Resourcing Tomorrow in London on 3 December.

“Discovery and development through either brownfield or greenfield exploration is the only way for the industry to create real value and remain sustainably profitable,” Bristow said.

According to the Barrick chief, global copper production and primary demand are due to part ways around 2026 with the gap growing rapidly soon after. Yet, while production is being squeezed, Bristow says “there is no shortage of metals and minerals in the ground”.

The issue, he says, is that much of the metals and minerals endowment is concentrated in what are classified as low-GDP regions. In other words, the countries global mining companies have – and largely continue to – avoid because they are considered high-risk investment destinations.

Where will future copper supply come from?

Asked where the future supply of copper may come from, Bristow pointed out that most promising deposits are in so-called “challenging jurisdictions”.

“One place is, of course, the Central African Copperbelt. The Tethyan Metallogenic Belt, [which stretches] from eastern Europe, all the way down through Asia, is another completely unexploited resource base,” Bristow said.

Barrick’s Reko Diq copper project in Pakistan, located near the Afghanistan and Iran borders, and its Lumwana project in Zambia are both set to come online in 2028. The projects have had a “significant head start” against others still dealing with costs, geometallurgical challenges, permitting and infrastructural issues, according to Bristow.

However, it is not just Africa and Asia that have untapped copper resources.

“There are still many copper deposits to be discovered in South America, and particularly if you move up the western seaboard, through into Ecuador and Colombia,” Bristow said.

“My point is that every one of those destinations I have just described are challenging jurisdictions.”

Government support is key to addressing copper deficit

Another promising copper project in South America is McEwen’s Los Azules in Argentina’s San Juan province, which is being developed in partnership with vehicle manufacturer Stellantis (18%) and mining major Rio Tinto (17%). Recent government initiatives have made the environment more favourable for development.

“Argentina has been effectively closed for quite a while for large-scale mining development, and it has been a bit of a pariah in the investment community,” Robert McEwen, chairman and chief owner of McEwen Mining told Resourcing Tomorrow in a separate address.