Zambian miners happy at scrapped import duty

File Photo: An aerial view of Anglo American's Los Bronces copper mine at Los Andes Mountain range, near Santiago city

File Photo: An aerial view of Anglo American's Los Bronces copper mine at Los Andes Mountain range, near Santiago city

Published Dec 22, 2016

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Johannesburg - Zambia’s decision to drop a proposed

import duty for semi-processed copper materials will help stabilise smelters in

Africa’s second-biggest producer of the metal, the Chamber of Mines said.

Finance Minister Felix Mutati’s announcement that the

government will abandon plans to charge a 7.5 percent levy on copper

concentrates from January 1 is “reassuring,” said Talent Ng’andwe, the acting

chief executive officer at the industry body. The chamber has yet to receive

official communication on the matter, he said.

The group that represents the local units of Glencore,

Vedanta Resources and First Quantum Minerals had criticised the proposal,

saying Zambian mines didn’t produce enough concentrates to feed its smelters

and needed to import from operations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.

The duty would make smelters unprofitable, it told a parliamentary committee

last month.

Read also:  Copper explodes past $6 000

“The Chamber of Mines welcomes this move,” Ng’andwe said

Wednesday by e-mail. “The year 2016 has not been a good year for the mining

sector and government must be commended for striving to make the mining sector

stay afloat.”

Mutati told lawmakers earlier Wednesday that the

government would scrap the proposed import duty, Reuters reported. Concentrates

are a mixture of crushed rock that contains about 40 percent copper, which is

then smelted to increase the metal content to above 90 percent. Congo is

Africa’s biggest producer of copper, used in electrical wiring and plumbing.

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