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China's Baowu acquires Simandou Iron Ore Operator

Baowu Resources in China, the largest steelmaker in the world, tightened its grip over one of the largest untapped iron ore deposits by taking control of Guinea's Simandou blocks 1 and 2. The company raised its stake from 49% to 51% after increasing its stake with the Winning Consortium Simandou.

According to the statement, both the Singapore-registered parent company and the Guinean subsidiary have been renamed Baowu Winning Consortium Simandou as a result of the deal. The deal was approved by Guinea on May 30th, 2024. It will be completed on January 30th, 2026.

In the Simfer partnership, Chinese state groups hold stakes in the southern Blocks 3 and 4. This is through a joint venture led by Chinalco with Rio Tinto.

Simfer developed shared rail and ports infrastructure with BWCS to support Simandou's debut.

Iron ore shipment in November

Baowu stated that the deal confirms their long-term commitment to one of the largest integrated mining and infrastructure projects in the world. They also said they will continue to pursue "project competition, the promotion and compliance of internationally recognized ESG Standards."

Simandou’s two mining hubs can ship up to 120 million metric tonnes of high-grade ore per year via the shared rail and Atlantic port. This will position Guinea as an important supplier of steelmaking material, alongside Australia and Brazil.

Over 70% of the output is controlled

. (Reporting and editing by Louise Heavens, Chris Reese and Maxwell Akalaare Adombila)

(source: Reuters)