The increase in copper and silver output was due partly to the beginning of operations of Marcobre’s $1.6-billion Mina Justa open pit mine, in July.
Around 80% of copper production, Peru’s main export, came from Antamina (20%), Southern Copper (17.3%), Cerro Verde (18.2%), Las Bambas (12.6%) and Chinalco (10.3%).
The top gold producing operations last year were Minera Poderosa and Minera Yanacocha, the report shows.
Protests against mining companies have skyrocketed since President Pedro Castillo took office in July.
The socialist leader swept to power pledging to strike a new deal with the copper mining sector and redistribute profits to Andean communities like those around Antamina, MMG’s Las Bambas and Glencore’s Antapaccay.
The country’s national society of mining, oil and energy, an industry body, said most protesters demanded measures to restrict mining in the headwaters of a basin, ignoring that such areas are already protected by the water resources law.
Supply concerns
Social unrest in the nation’s mining areas deepened global concerns around a looming deficit of copper, considered a key metal in the world’s transition to greener technologies.
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According to estimates from CRU Group, the copper industry needs to spend more than $100 billion to close what could be an annual shortage of 4.7 million tonnes by 2030.
Used in everything from construction materials to batteries and engines, copper is both an economic bellwether and a key ingredient in the push toward renewable energies and electric vehicles.
If producers fail to address the deficit, prices will keep rising and present a challenge to the world leaders, who are counting on a worldwide energy transition to fight climate change.