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Aldebaran, a Canadian company, plans to invest $1.5 billion in Argentina's copper project

Aldebaran, a Canadian company, plans to invest $1.5 billion in Argentina's copper project

Javier Robeto, the country manager of Aldebaran Resources Canada, said that at least $1.5 billion will be needed to develop the Altar copper project located in northern Argentina.

Robeto stated that the company will include this figure in its preliminary assessment of September. This will show Altar has about 32 billion pounds copper resources and approximately 6.7 million ounces gold resources.

Aldebaran does not know if it will be able to spend the money in time to qualify under RIGI (the government's incentive program), which provides long-term tax breaks as well as access to international dispute tribunals for investments above $200 million.

The scheme will continue to accept applications until July 2026. There is a possibility of an additional year.

It's not sure we'll make the cut. What happens if RIGI is stopped? Robeto explained that the tax burden would automatically return to 54%.

RIGI has approved only two lithium mining projects so far, both of which were implemented in October by President Javier Milei.

Glencore and McEwen Mining, among others who are working on copper projects, have also applied for the program.

Robeto has not provided a timeline for the construction and production of Altar. The estimated lifespan is 20-25 years. The economic assessment includes two scenarios of copper production in either cathode or concentrate form.

Robeto explained that the idea was to do a trade-off, examining both pros and cons. (Reporting and Writing by Lucila SIGAL, Editing by Jan Harvey).

(source: Reuters)