Latest News

Rio Tinto increases Simandou stockpiles by 2 million tonnes for the first shipment

Rio Tinto increases Simandou stockpiles by 2 million tonnes for the first shipment

Rio Tinto is preparing to ship 2 million metric tonnes of high-grade ore from its Simandou mine in Guinea by mid-November, according to three sources. This would be the very first shipment out of the massive mine that will reshape the global supply and pricing.

Rio's third-quarter report, released on Tuesday, stated that SimFer, one of two mines in Simandou, had amassed 1,5 million tons of ore. The first ore was loaded onto rail transport back in October.

Unspecified details were not provided by a spokesperson, but he said that the company was continuing to progress the project at "pace".

SIMANDOU PRESSURE HIGH-COST RIVALS

Sources, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that the first shipment was expected to be sent to China, which is the world's largest steel producer and consumes over 70% of all seaborne iron ore.

Rio will first route exports via infrastructure owned by Winning Consortium Simandou. The port of this partner is close to completion.

Rio announced on Tuesday that it expected to begin loading vessels around November, but did not disclose the volume of initial cargo.

The ownership of Simandou is divided between the consortiums of Rio, Chinese state-owned Chalco, and WCS - a Singaporean and Chinese consortium.

Simandou is estimated to hold 4 billion tons ore with an average iron content of 65%. At full capacity, SimFer will contribute half.

According to the International Monetary Fund, the project will boost Guinea's economy by 26% between 2030 and 2040.

The Guinean military government intends to officially commission the project on 11 November.

WCS, the company that operates Simandou’s other mine began stockpiling iron ore in September. This set up a race to gain market share early.

Tom Price, Panmure Liberum's head of commodities, said that iron ore prices may fall if Australian and Brazilian miner's don't react to Simandou’s increase.

The seaborne supply would increase by 8-9 percent if the 120 million ton annual production by 2028.

Peter Cunningham, Rio's finance chief, said in July the launch of Simandou would force some high-cost suppliers off the market.

China is tightening its grip on Guinea’s resource sector and leading bauxite imports.

Chinese steelmakers are turning to low-cost ore of high quality to reduce emissions and energy consumption.

WCS and Guinea’s Mines Ministry did not respond to comments. Maxwell Akalaare Adombila, reporting. Clara Denina contributed additional reporting. Mark Potter and Veronica Brown edited the article.

(source: Reuters)