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Vale partially resumes iron ore mining at Vargem Grande

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 24/07/19

Brazilian iron ore producer Vale will restart dry processing at the Vargem Grande mining complex in the Minas Gerais province, adding 5mn t/yr of capacity.

The partial restart of Vargem Grande, following an approval by the national mining agency, will add to the supply of Brazilian blended fines (BRBF), a blend of the high-silica southern system fines and IOCJ fines, which is among the best-selling medium-grade ores in the Chinese market.

Vale had halted production at Abóboras, Vargem Grande, Capitão do Mato and Tamanduá operations in the Vargem Grande complex on 30 January, after a tailings dam accident at the Feijao iron ore mine on 25 January led to several deaths. The complex's total production capacity was around 13mn t/yr for wet processed iron ore before the closure.

Vale is increasing its production capacity for dry processed ore with a planned investment of $2.5bn over the next five years. This will reduce its dependence on tailings dams, which are used in the wet processing method.

The most-traded January iron ore contract on the Dalian Commodity Exchange has fallen by 3.6pc today in response to the restart of Vale's operations, which will increase supplies of medium-grade fines in China, although marginally, even as demand remains sluggish because of slower steel sales in the off-season summer months and iron ore fines sintering restrictions in Tangshan city.

Vale blends its BRBF fines at the Teluk Rubiah iron ore terminal in Malaysia and at several ports in China. The shortfall in supplies of southern system fines has tightened BRBF fines supply, helping to lift demand for competing mainstream grades such as PB fines and Newman fines. Demand for Yandi fines has also increased as mills seek alternative sources of low-alumina ores.

The Argus-assessed BRBF fines price on Qingdao port has increased by 56pc since the tailings dam accident on 25 January to 901 yuan/wmt ($131/wmt) at a seaborne equivalent of around $122/dmt on 23 July.

Vale has left its shipment guidance for 2019 unchanged at 307mn-332mn t/yr, down by 50mn-75mn t from the 2018 volume.

Anglo-Australian mining company Rio Tinto has guided for lower iron ore output in 2019, while BHP has projected modest gains in output in the July 2019-June 2020 fiscal year. Seaborne supplies are likely to remain in deficit to demand for rest of the year, supporting iron ore prices.


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