Swiss mining giant Glencore Xstrata is expected to pull out of a US$5.9 billion gold-copper mining project in the Philippines, its Australian partner Indophil said.
Melbourne-based Indophil Resources NL said in a quarterly report released this week that “Glencore Xstrata has advised Indophil of its preference to pursue divestment of its interest in Tampakan.”
“All indications point to Glencore Xstrata seeking to divest its majority interest in the Tampakan Copper-Gold Project,” the report added.
It said that a possible divestment of the Tampakan project had been under consideration since April last year, seen as necessary in order to fulfill conditions set by the Chinese government to approve the merger of commodities giant Glencore and the mining company Xstrata.
Glencore Xstrata also announced in September that it was no longer focusing on “greenfield” mines started from scratch — such as the Tampakan site — preferring to work on existing mines instead.
The Indophil report conceded that the Tampakan project, located in the troubled southern island of Mindanao, had run into problems, chiefly the provincial government’s ban on open-pit mining which delayed the start of development.
The mine would be the Philippines’ largest-ever foreign investment, but it has faced opposition from church, community and environmental groups and would require numerous other government and community permits to be obtained.
In August last year, Glencore Xstrata said it was laying off nearly all workers at the Tampakan project amid continued delays.
Indophil said in its quarterly report that the company and its local partners “remain optimistic that the pathways for the development of Tampakan will be cleared.”
Glencore Xstrata owns 62.5 percent and Indophil 37.5 percent of a joint venture that holds a 40 percent controlling stake in Sagittarius Mines Inc, which operates the Tampakan project.
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