New MoU ups Jubilee’s Zambia refining footprint

10th September 2021 By: Martin Creamer - Creamer Media Editor

New MoU ups Jubilee’s Zambia refining footprint

Jubilee CEO Leon Coetzer
Photo by: Creamer Media

London Aim- and JSE AltX-listed metals processing company Jubilee Metals announced late last month that it had entered into a binding memorandum of understanding (MoU) on the refining of copper and cobalt, both highly sought-after green metals.

The MoU with Mopani, a subsidiary of ZCCM Investment in Zambia, involves the installation of additional copper and cobalt refining capacity through the recapitalisation of Mopani’s existing refining capacity under care and maintenance.

This additional refining capacity targets increasing Jubilee’s existing copper refining capacity by a further 17 000 t/y of copper.

Together with the Sable Refinery, this increases the group’s total potential refining capacity to more than 31 000 t/y.

The agreement removes the need for Jubilee to build a new processing facility to process the nearby tailings deposits it secured last year.

“Our engineers are already on site working alongside the Mopani team to upgrade the detailed project designs as we accelerate the implementation. I look forward to working with the Mopani team as we deliver this project and continue to further explore opportunities for collaboration,” said Jubilee CEO Leon Coetzer in a media release to Engineering News & Mining Weekly.

The project will establish Jubilee’s northern Zambian refining footprint for the refining of the copper and cobalt concentrates produced at Jubilee’s Kitwe and the Luanshya copper and cobalt tailings.

Jubilee’s Sable Refinery will be dedicated to the refining of concentrates produced by its Project Roan currently under construction and set to commence commissioning in November as well as its copper tailings at Kabwe and contracted third-party ore suppliers.

Under a collaborative framework, the agreement brings together Jubilee’s tailings processing capability and Mopani’s established access to existing refining infrastructure for about 275-million tonnes of surface copper and cobalt tailings in the region.