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Minister says that the Codelco-SQM Lithium deal will be completed before Boric's departure in 2026.

In an interview, Alvaro Garcia, the newly appointed Economy minister of Chile, said that he expects Codelco - a state-owned copper producer – and SQM - a local miner – to complete a major partnership deal with lithium before 2026 when the current administration leaves.

Some presidential candidates have stated that they will review or cancel the deal if it is not completed before President Gabriel Boric leaves the office. This puts pressure on the administration to complete the crucial pillar in its pledge to increase the role of the state in lithium production.

This is our immediate goal. "We expect that it will be finished before the end" of the administration, said Garcia. He was appointed last week as part of a cabinet reshuffle which made Nicolas Grau Finance Minister.

Codelco, a Santiago-based company, and SQM originally expected that the joint venture would go into effect early in 2025. However, final steps took longer than expected.

Due to SQM’s global presence, the deal needs approval from antitrust regulators around the world. SQM anticipates approval from China regulatory authorities in September or October.

This partnership will give Codelco the majority of SQM’s lithium production on the Atacama Salt Flat. Codelco is the largest copper producer in the world.

Garcia also said that he expects to see new operating contracts for lithium, including a partnership between Rio Tinto and the state-owned Enami.

He did not provide any further information.

He said that "companies have stated they are still interested."

Accelerate Investment

Garcia expects that a law to streamline the development permits, which has been long awaited, will also go into effect within days. Congress passed the legislation in July. However, the administration must wait for a court review because of challenges by legislators.

Garcia stated, "Our information indicates that the court already agreed." The most important thing to do now is to determine how the regulations are to be implemented.

Congress has delayed a second bill that would have accelerated the environmental assessment process, the longest part in Chile's permit process.

Garcia did not give a new timeline for the legislation, but said that the first bill which deals with so-called sector permissions will already help to encourage investment.

Garcia stated that "the process will become even more streamlined but the progress made in the sector permits area already expedites projects greatly."

(source: Reuters)