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US talks frequently with Congo's Gecamines on cobalt and copper, official says

The United States speaks regularly with the Democratic Republic of Congo's state miner Gecamines, a senior State Department authorities told , as Washington looks for to deepen relationships with key providers of cobalt and copper across the African continent.

WHY IT is essential

Chinese aggressive investment across Congo, Zambia and elsewhere in Africa - which holds huge supplies of minerals utilized to make electrical automobiles and other electronic devices - has for a long time raised concern in Washington.

Jose Fernandez, the U.S. State Department's under secretary for economic development, energy, and the environment, said in an interview this week that discussions with Gecamines center on supply offers and prospective new mines or other jobs the company is thinking about. Discussions take place usually every 4 to six weeks, he stated.

The Mineral Security Partnership (MSP), a multinational cooperation of more than a dozen nations and the European Union to purchase a global supply chain, announced a handle Gecamines and Japan's JOGMEC in February. That deal was a. product of those discussions, Fernandez stated.

SECRET PRICES QUOTE

Be it China or anyone else, it's simply not good to have one. single provider of anything, Fernandez stated.

( Host nations) do not desire an investment system where. financiers generate their own workforce, do not clean up their. environmental damage. They have actually experienced that and that's not. what they want.

Fernandez declined to discuss whether the U.S. government. would seek to purchase all or part of Canadian miner First Quantum's. Zambian properties. First Quantum has actually been seeking fresh. sources of money amid an unrelated dispute with Panama's. federal government that closed one of the business's essential copper mines.

CONTEXT

Fernandez stated that the United States continues to work with. Zambia and Congo on mining and regulative structures.

Despite Washington's efforts over the last few years, the United. States has actually lagged behind China in securing access to minerals. across the African continent required for the production of. items like EV batteries and solar panels.

Washington's goal is not to balance out China's influence in. Africa's crucial mineral sector however to diversify its own supply. chains and motivate African partners to boost their mining. requirements, Fernandez stated.

(source: Reuters)