Zijin Mining, China’s largest gold miner, has begun operations at its Cukaru Peki copper and gold mine in Serbia.
The asset, part of the Timok project, is expected to make the Balkan country Europe’s second-largest copper producer.
Zijin has poured US$474 million to date into the new underground mine, which is slated to have annual capacity of 3.3 million tonnes of ore.
“The first part of the project involves mining an ultra high-grade ore body. It is expected to produce 50,000 tonnes of copper and 3 tonnes of gold in 2021,” it said.
Cukaru Peki was originally slated to begin production in the summer of 2021, with an initial average copper output of 91,000 tonnes a year and annual gold production of about 200,000 ounces. It is now expected to increase output incrementally until reaching a peak of 135,000 tonnes of copper a year.
Serbia’s government anticipates the country’s mining sector will start generating between 4% and 5% of its total GDP in less than ten years, a significant increase from its current 2%.
In 2018 Zijin Mining became Serbia’s strategic partner in RTB Bor, the country’s sole copper complex, pledging to invest US$1.26 billion in return for a 63% stake.
Since then, it has invested US$142 million to improve local ecology and environment, which is more than double of the amount agreed in a strategic agreement with the company, according to Zijin.
RTB Bor, in eastern Serbia, was key in the development of Serbia’s industrial sector before the collapse of communist Yugoslavia in the early 1990s. However, it later became a burden on the country’s struggling economy because of malpractices and international sanctions during the regime of late president Slobodan Milosevic.
The company had to temporarily halt work at the mine in April due to alleged breach of the country’s environmental standards.
The Serbian unit was ordered to complete a wastewater treatment plant on priority at the mine to avoid polluting the River Pek, a tributary of the Danube.
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Serbia Zijin Copper is in the midst of overhauling and expanding its four mines and a smelter. The plan also includes improving environmental protection in the heavily polluted Bor region, in Serbia’s east.
China has spent billions of euros in Serbia, as part of its so-called belt and road initiative to open new foreign trade links for local companies.
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