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Rio Tinto suspends Guinea mine work, resulting in a spike of iron ore.

Rio Tinto suspends Guinea mine work, resulting in a spike of iron ore.

Iron ore futures prices rose to their highest level in a week on Monday, as Rio Tinto suspended its Simandou project after an incident. This heightened fears that production could be delayed at the mine.

As of 0204 GMT, the most-traded contract for January iron ore on China's Dalian Commodity Exchange was up 1.56% at 781.5 Yuan ($109.07).

The contract reached its highest level since August 14, at 788 Yuan, earlier in the session.

As of 0154 GMT the benchmark September iron ore traded on the Singapore Exchange had risen 1.5% to $102.1 per ton after reaching its highest level since August 18, at $102.95.

Rio Tinto, world's biggest iron ore mining company, announced on Saturday that it has suspended activities at Guinea SimFer's mine site following an incident which resulted in the death of a contract worker.

The Guinean government and Chalco Iron Ore Holdings, China, owned two of four Simandou blocks.

The near-term demand for the main steelmaking ingredient remained strong despite the production restrictions placed on mills at the top Chinese steelmaking center Tangshan in order to maintain clean air in Beijing before a military parade commemorating the end of World War Two.

The average daily hot metal production, which is a measure of iron ore consumption, was unchanged at 2,41 million tons during the week ending August 21, according to data from Mysteel.

Coking coal and coke, which are used to make steel, also gained on the DCE. They rose by 4.47% each and 3.46% respectively.

The Shanghai Futures Exchange has seen steel benchmarks rise due to higher raw material costs.

Rebar rose by 0.58%. Hot-rolled coils rose by 0.83%. Wire rod increased by 0.54%. Stainless steel grew 0.39%.

(source: Reuters)