The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a financing package for the Reko Diq copper and gold mine in Pakistan, to help meet rising global demand for critical minerals.
ADB is contributing $300mn in loans to the Reko Diq Mining Company (RMDC), which owns the mine, and a $110mn partial credit guarantee to cover the government of Balochistan's equity component. Financing for this project will be the largest-ever foreign direct investment in Pakistan, the ADB said.
Reko Diq is expected to be world's fifth-largest copper mine when completed, and will produce 800,000 t/yr of copper concentrate in its first phase. The mine will begin producing copper concentrate in 2028 and is expected to operate for at least 37 years. It is located in the Chagai district of Balochistan, and work at the site began this year.
RMDC is a joint venture between Canada-based Barrick Mining, which owns 50pc and will build and operate the mine, the government of Balochistan — through Balochistan Mineral Reserve — which owns 25pc, and three federal state enterprises that together own the remaining 25pc.
Barrick expects Reko Diq's first phase to cost $3bn. It intends to contribute $1.4bn-1.7bn of its own equity funding to this total. The International Finance Corporation (IFC) in June announced it plans to provide a $400mn loan for the project, in addition to a $300mn A-loan that it had proposed.
Reko Diq is also the first mining project supported by the ADB under its new critical minerals-to-manufacturing value chains approach, which is "designed to help Asia and the Pacific capitalise on rising demand for materials essential to clean energy and digital technologies", the ADB said.
Copper is an essential component in the production of renewable energy technologies, electric vehicles, batteries, smartphones and data centres.
Global copper consumption is expected to increase by 2.3pc on the year to 26.38mn t this year, driven by higher demand from Asia and the US, according to Chilean copper commission Cochilco. Meanwhile, global copper mine output in 2025 will rise by 0.5pc on the year to 22.71mn t, with expansion limited due to operational and logistical disruptions in countries such as the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Indonesia and Panama, Cochilco said.

