Chile Codelco 1st Half Copper Output 783,000 Tons Vs 675,000 Tons
August 13 2009 - 5:18PM
Dow Jones News
Copper output at Corporacion Nacional del Cobre de Chile, or
Codelco, the world's largest copper-mining company, rose in the
first half of the year to 783,000 metric tons from 675,000 tons in
the first six months of 2008, Codelco Chief Executive Jose Pablo
Arellano said Thursday.
Including output from its 49% stake in the El Abra mine,
operated by 51% shareholder Freeport-McMoran Copper & Gold Inc.
(FCX), total production in the first half reached 822,000 tons, up
from 715,000 tons, Arellano said at a press conference.
Codelco's output increased from a year earlier due to production
at its Gaby mine, which added 70,000 tons of output, as well as
improved efficiency at all its operations, the CEO said.
The mining company also produced 10,000 tons of molybdenum in
the first half, unchanged from a year earlier.
With copper averaging $1.83 a pound during the first half of the
year, Codelco's pretax profit plummeted to $722 million from $4.11
billion in the first half of 2008, when copper averaged $3.68/lb. A
sharp drop in molybdenum prices, which fell to an average $20.1 a
kilogram in the second quarter from an average $72.60/kg in the
same period a year earlier, also pulled pretax profit down.
If Codelco earnings were reported using the same tax
requirements as private companies, it would have posted a net
profit of $575 million, compared with $3.28 billion in the first
half of 2008.
Company earnings go entirely to the public sector, including a
controversial allocation to armed forces weapons procurement
totaling 10% of sales.
As to the recovery seen recently in international copper prices,
currently around $2.91 a pound, Arellano expects prices to remain
volatile in the coming months driven by Chinese demand, but they
should stabilize over the long term.
-By Julian Dowling, Dow Jones Newswires; 56-2-820-4241;
julian.dowling@dowjones.com
(Risa Grais-Targow contributed to this report.)