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After talks failed, Capstone Copper's Mantoverde Mine in Chile is closed by miners.

After talks failed, Capstone Copper's Mantoverde Mine in Chile is closed by miners.
After talks failed, Capstone Copper's Mantoverde Mine in Chile is closed by miners.

After talks broke down between the main union and Capstone Copper over new labour contracts, hundreds of miner began a strike at the Mantoverde copper-and-gold?mine located in northern Chile.

In a Friday statement, the Union No. In a statement released on Friday, the Union No.

After failing to reach a deal late on Thursday, the union's 645 members went on strike at 8 a.m. local (1100 GMT). Negotiations broke down after the company refused to agree to the union’s?final requests, estimated at $500,000 per year, or 0.03% of the $1.4 billion projected revenue of the company. Chile is the largest copper producer in the world and the strike occurs at a time of record-high copper prices.

Capstone, a Canadian company, said in a statement that it was willing to engage in talks after the failed mediated talks late Thursday night. It added that the striking workers represented?about half of all workers at the mine, and 22% of its total workforce. Capstone also expects production to be at 30% during the strike.

Capstone holds 70% of Mantoverde, while Mitsubishi Materials owns the remaining 30%. Copper production at the mine is expected to range between 29,000 and 32,000 tons in 2025. According to the state copper commission Cochilco, Chilean copper production is expected to reach 5.5 million tonnes in 2025. (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton; Alexander Villegas)

(source: Reuters)