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在线翻译:
szdaily -> Business
Copper smelters seek to blend concentrates at ports
     2016-March-10  08:53    Shenzhen Daily

    CHINA’S copper industry is urging the government to allow the blending of raw material copper concentrate imports when they land at the country’s ports, which will allow for cheaper though toxic supply to arrive.

    Li Baomin, who is the chairman of China’s biggest integrated copper producer Jiangxi Copper Co. Ltd., proposed the government allow blending operations in “special administrative areas” at ports to help stabilize supplies of copper concentrates and cut buying costs, according to a report by China Nonferrous Metals News on Monday.

    In China, special administrative areas include bonded warehouses and bonded areas at ports.

    Li was acting in his role as a deputy to the National People’s Congress (NPC) during its meetings that started Saturday, and speaking for China’s copper industry, Huang Dongfeng, a spokesman at Jiangxi Copper, told Reuters by phone late Tuesday.

    Jiangxi Copper does support the proposal, Huang added.

    Delegates typically lobby proposals at the annual NPC meeting and the government may or may not accept the proposals.

    If approved, firms would be allowed to import copper concentrates with high levels of arsenic, a toxic element that is often found with copper ore. Chinese smelters are currently prohibited from using concentrates with more than 0.5 percent arsenic content.

    By blending at ports, China could reduce purchases of previously blended concentrates that meet the domestic standard that is currently supplied by traders.

    More high-arsenic concentrates have come onto the global market in the past two to three years, particularly from mines controlled by Codelco in Chile and China’s Chinalco Mining in Peru.

    As a result, Chinese smelters have imported more concentrates that are mixed with higher arsenic ores and standard grades from the trading houses and Codelco.

    Since high-arsenic concentrates are prohibited at Chinese smelters, they demand higher treatment and refining charges than for standard and blended grades. Standard grade concentrates are typically lower than blended.(SD-Agencies)

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