lunes, 22 de febrero de 2010

Cuba says Venezuela ferronickel venture on track

Cuba says Venezuela ferronickel venture on track
By: Liezel Hill
22nd February 2010

HAVANA - Cuban plans to produce ferronickel with Venezuela at a
partially completed plant in eastern Holguin province are on track with
preliminary work well under way, official media said on Monday.

"Civil and technological projects have progressed, as have surveys of
the mines and contracting of the labor force and specialized equipment,"
said a report on the nickel industry during the morning television newscast.

"Plans for the project, one of he most important in the country, are
being met," the report said, without providing further details.

Experts have estimated it would take around two years for operations to
begin at the plant once preliminary work is finished.

Cuba and Venezuela formed Ferroniquel S.A. in 2007 to complete the
Camarioca nickel works left unfinished with the collapse of the Soviet Bloc.

The two countries have also formed a joint venture in Venezuela to
produce stainless steel using Cuban ferronickel.

Plans call for $500 million to be invested in the Cuban part of the
project and $600 million in the steel plant.

Cuban officials have said in the past Camarioca could produce 68 000
tonnes of ferronickel annually (21 000 tonnes nickel).

Cuba currently has three nickel processing plants operating in Holguin,
one a joint venture with Canadian resource company Sherritt
International and two older state-owned plants.

The Communist-run Caribbean island is one of the world's largest nickel
producers at 70 000 tonnes last year, and supplies 10 percent of the
world's cobalt, according to the Basic Industry Ministry.

Ferronickel is an iron-nickel combination mostly used in steel making.

Nickel is essential in the production of stainless steel and other
corrosion-resistant alloys. Cobalt is critical in production of super
alloys used for such products as aircraft engines.

Unrefined nickel plus cobalt has consolidated its position as Cuba's
largest export.

Cuban nickel is considered to be Class II with an average 90 percent
nickel content.

Cuba's National Minerals Resource Center reported that eastern Holguin
province, where the industry is located, had around a third of the
world's known reserves.

Edited by: Liezel Hill

Cuba says Venezuela ferronickel venture on track (22 February 2010)
http://www.miningweekly.com/article/cuba-says-venezuela-ferronickel-venture-on-track-2010-02-22

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