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Panama President Mulino rejects new mining contract for Cobre Panama dispute

Panama President Mulino rejects new mining contract for Cobre Panama dispute

Panama has not yet decided on the future of its mine and will not be offering a new mining contract in order to settle the Cobre Panama dispute, said Panama's President Jose Raul Mulino during a speech at a business event held in Panama on Tuesday night. First Quantum mines, the Canadian company that owns it, dropped their arbitration against Panama a few weeks ago.

"I cannot tell you what direction (we will take) yet. Mulino stated that the only thing that will not exist is a contract. "I announce here that there won't be a contract for mining," Mulino added.

He said that the approval of the legal contract must go through the assembly and the current Panamanian Assembly will not do it. Mulino stated that "we will do whatever it takes to create a legitimate association and make it crystal clear that this mine belongs to Panama." Since November 2023 the Cobre Panama mine is in dispute after Panama's top court declared that the mining contract was illegal and banned all mining within the country. Massive public protests over environmental concerns forced the previous government shut down the mine.

Analysts viewed First Quantum's decision to withdraw the $20 billion arbitration case against Panama as a positive, but cautious outcome of the long-running dispute.

BancTrust & Co. released a research report that stated: "It is important to note that the reopening process of the mine will be a difficult one, requiring first congressional approval, followed by signing a new contract with the company, and finally, the Supreme Court's green light. This all takes place amid the pushback of environmental groups that were instrumental in forcing closure of the mining in 2023."

The future of the mine's reopening is still uncertain, however, as Mulino has ruled out the use of a legal contract in order to settle the dispute.

(source: Reuters)