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Vale Base Metals sold majority stake in Thompson Nickel Belt Thompson Nickel Belt to Canadian led consortium

Vale Base Metals agreed to sell its majority stake in the Thompson Nickel Belt Mine in Manitoba to an investor consortium, which would create a new nickel-producing company in Canada. Exiro Minerals of Toronto, Orion Resources Partners and Canada Growth Fund are part of the consortium. Brazilian mining company Vale has agreed to sign a five-year agreement for the off-take of its 18.9% stake in Exiro Nickel. The new consortium will invest $200 million in order to revive a mine that Vale had been reviewing since last year, when the price of nickel fell to its lowest level in five years due to increased supply and low demand. Shastri Ramnath is the CEO of Exiro Minerals. He said, "We have at least 20 years of nickel that will be profitable." Ramnath has been appointed chief executive of Exiro Nickel. He said that the company must be able produce nickel at low prices and remain competitive. Vale is a major producer of nickel used to make electric vehicles and other products. The company aims to produce 175,000 - 200,000 tons of nickel by 2026. Shaun Usmar is the CEO of Vale Base Metals. He said that the $200 million was not in their pocket. The money is going to delivering competitiveness for the operation moving forward. He said that the company was standing behind its new owners to ensure they were not burdened by legacy liabilities.

Nickel is officially a critical mineral for the Canadian government. The G7 nations, including Canada, are racing to secure critical minerals such as nickel and copper in an effort to break countries like China's and Indonesia's chokehold on the production of these metals. Reporting by Isabel Teles and Divyarajagopal from Toronto, and editing by David Goodman & Paul Simao.

(source: Reuters)