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Ivanhoe CEO: Ivanhoe has a captive audience on Congo's sulphuric market

Ivanhoe Mines' sulphuric-acid?has a captive audience in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The chemical is soaring due to limited supplies caused by the conflict with Iran.

Ivanhoe, a Vancouver-based company, began selling sulphuric acids as a by-product of copper smelting on its Kamoa Kakula project this year to other mine operators in the DRC copper belt who need acid to dissolve ore copper using a process known as leaching.

The Middle East has struggled to supply?world markets', causing fears about a global sulphuric-acid shortage. Ivanhoe CEO Marna cloete told a copper industry gathering in Santiago that the DRC alone has an acid market of 2 million metric tonnes per year.

"We only produced just over 100,000 tonnes in the first quarter. But that's going out to Glencore and ERG (Eurasian Resources Group)... so it's local," she said. She added that the annual acid production would reach 600,000.00 to 700,000.00 tons when its smelter is running at full capacity.

She?added that the local market was more than enough for us to sell. This is because restrictions on exporting Zambian sulphur had prevented?DRC firms from producing their own acid. Cloete said, "Our distribution is captive."

Ivanhoe stated in a Monday statement that the Kamoa-Kakula Smelter has ramped up its capacity to 60%, and further expansion is constrained by "a lack of concentrate feed". Ivanhoe stated that the company's high-strength?sulphuric acids were priced at around $500 per ton during the first quarter. Spot prices increased over the course of the three month period.

(source: Reuters)