Latest News

Rio Tinto mine's Simandou iron-ore mine in Guinea: Contract worker dead

Rio Tinto, the world's biggest producer of iron ore, announced on Sunday that a contract worker had died after an incident at its SimFer mine in Guinea, which is part of Simandou's iron ore project.

The death is the latest in a string of fatal accidents linked to the construction and operation of mines, ports and a 670 km (416 mile) railway linking the remote mining area to the coast of Guinea.

The Anglo-Australian mining company announced that operations at the SimFer site had been suspended after Saturday's accident. Simon Trott, its chief executive said he was 'traveling to Guinea this coming week.

'DETERMINED to LEARN from the incident'

Trott stated in a press release that "we are determined to learn from this incident and do everything we can in order to provide a safe workplace and prevent tragedies like this."

Rio Tinto reported one death in March, but a?review? of internal documents?concluded that 13 local workers died between November 20,23 and the end of 2024 while working on infrastructure construction.

Since then, the company has confirmed that two additional deaths have occurred, including one on Saturday.

Three foreign workers died in an accident on a different site, according to Winning -Consortium Simandou.

The death toll has reached 18

This brings the total death toll since the construction of the railway and mines to 18 workers.

Simandou has a large Chinese backing: China Baowu Resources owns a majority stake in Winning Consortium Simandou, which controls the northern half of Blocks 1 and 2.

The southern half of the project, Blocks 3 &?4, are held by Rio Tinto in partnership with Chinalco, the Guinean government, and Rio Tinto directly. This puts roughly 75% under Chinese influence, and 25% under Rio Tinto's interest. (Reporting and editing by Susan Fenton, Matthew Lewis and Clara Denina)

(source: Reuters)