Peru’s Antamina halts mining after manager dies in accident

Antamina mine, Peru. Image from Glencore.

Operations at Peru’s Antamina, one of the world’s biggest copper mines, remains halted after an accident claimed the life of a senior manager and injured another employee.

The Antamina copper and zinc mine — owned by BHP Group, Glencore Plc, Teck Resources Ltd. — is working with Peruvian authorities to investigate the Tuesday incident, the operating company said in a statement.

Senior operations manager Edwin Colque Calisaya died in an accident at the Yanacancha area of the open-pit mine in the Andes Mountains north of Lima, Antamina said, without giving details. Photos posted on social media showed a passenger vehicle crushed by a giant haul truck.

The incident triggered a full safety shutdown, which was still in effect on Wednesday, a company spokesperson said. An extended stoppage at a mine that churned out 435,000 metric tons last year could further tighten global supplies of semi-processed copper known as concentrate.

In February, Peruvian authorities approved a key permit allowing a $2 billion extension at Antamina to proceed. The permit comes as the No. 2 copper-producing nation faces a dearth of new projects that threatens to constrain future production growth.

(By James Attwood)


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