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Chile's Mantoverde makes workers new offer as strike continues

Capstone Copper’s Mantoverde Copper and Gold Mine in?northern Chile announced on Wednesday that it had presented a new contract offer to its workers to try to end a strike which began early in January after discussions over new labor contracts failed.

The company stated that the offer is the same as the previous proposal. It includes the payment of the equivalent of $17.400 per employee.

Since January 2, members of?Union 2 are on strike after formal negotiations?broke down. After a striker group occupied the desalination facility of 'the mine' more than ten days ago, there have been few signs of progress in the dispute.

The mining company owned by Capstone Copper in Canada said that "this Wednesday, the?company?presented its new, finalized?offer as a gesture?of?good-faith to end?the dispute?."

The company also said that the proposal includes a 1% increase in wages, as well as other benefits. It called for the "immediate restoration of control over their facilities and the ending of the blockade."

In a press release, the union stated that the new proposal was "a significant step-backward" compared to a?proposal from January 8th. This is true for both permanent conditions and termination bonuses.

The statement added that the proposal would be presented to the union members on the Thursday, and a vote would be held within five days.

In 2025 Mantoverde produced 62,308 tonnes of copper sulfide and 32,807 tonnes of copper cathodes. This accounted for 0.4% of global copper production.

The strike comes as copper prices are at record levels amid high expectations for future demand.

(source: Reuters)