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Kuvimba's revised platinum mine plan in Zimbabwe as prices rise

Kuvimba's revised platinum mine plan in Zimbabwe as prices rise

Trevor Barnard, the CEO of Zimbabwe's Kuvimba Mining House, said that the company will move forward with its Darwendale Platinum Project as an open pit instead of the previously planned underground mine. This project is being accelerated as platinum prices are rising.

The project, which was launched by the former president Robert Mugabe in September 2014 and Russia's Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergey Lavrov, initially consisted of an underground mine. It would have cost $450 million for the first phase.

In 2022, the project was put in jeopardy when Kuvimba’s Russian joint-venture partner resigned and prices for platinum group metals, which are mainly used to reduce vehicle emissions, plummeted.

Barnard said in an interview that Kuvimba was moving away from its "big-bang approach" and will start with an open mine at a cost of initial $50 million.

Barnard stated that the project's scope and phased approach had changed significantly. It's difficult to raise $450 millions for a project in Zimbabwe, let alone a platinum one.

He said that instead, the funds would come from Mutapa, Zimbabwe's sovereign fund, as well as cash generated internally and "a bit of debt."

The company has also three gold mines which will produce 116,000 ounces of gold in 2024.

Analysts believe that rising platinum prices could be used to revive projects that were halted when the price was at its lowest. This is due to a rise in Chinese imports, and a decrease in South Africa's supply.

The price of platinum rose by 36% in the second quarter. Prices soared by 28% in June as hedge funds and traders piled into the market. The month was their best since 1986, and they reached a record high of $1432.6 per ounce, an 11-year old high.

Tharisa delayed its $391-million Karo PGM mine in Zimbabwe because of low metal prices. On July 9, it said that the company was "working to accelerate the final development", as improved commodity prices helped boost its balance sheet. (Reporting and editing by Nelson Banya, Barbara Lewis and Chris Takudzwa Muronzi)

(source: Reuters)