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Tin shipments to Myanmar's Wa State are expected to resume soon, according to a tin company.

Tin shipments to Myanmar's Wa State are expected to resume soon, according to a tin company.

The International Tin Association announced on Wednesday that tin shipments from Myanmar’s Wa State will resume within the next few months, after an almost two-year ban.

The speculation by traders that mining will resume this week has affected tin's price, which reached a low of three weeks on Wednesday.

Metal, which is mainly used in soldering electronics and semiconductors fell by 1.6% on the London Metal Exchange to $32,775 per metric ton at 1505 GMT. This was the lowest since June 25.

Myanmar is the third largest tin producer in the world and China's top supplier. Wa State accounts for 70% of Myanmar tin exports.

A large part of Wa State is controlled by the United Wa State Army (a militia affiliated with Myanmar's Wa ethnic minority). In August 2023, it suspended all mining activities in the areas that it controls to protect its mineral resources.

According to Ye Myo Hein of the Southeast Asia Peace Institute, despite a long-standing truce with Myanmar's military leaders, UWSA still maintains between 30,000-35,000 personnel with modern weapons sourced primarily from China.

Tom Langston is a senior market intelligence analyst with the ITA. He said: "After limited progress over the past few months, the increased licensing fees created a stumbling-block. We now understand that several operators have secured three-year permits at Man Maw."

In the next few months, it is expected that shipments from the autonomous area will resume. "However, there are still uncertainties regarding the strict controls over equipment and personnel movement," he said.

The LME's rising inventories of tin are also a factor. (Reporting by Eric Onstad Editing by Frances Kerry) (Reporting and editing by Frances Kerry.)

(source: Reuters)