Zim Now Writer
Marula Mining, a United Kingdom-based mining company, has set up a Zimbabwean arm called Muchai Mining as it seeks to tap into opportunities that abound in lithium and copper.
Marula will hold 80% of Muchai’s shares, with Gondo Mineral Resources, a local entity, taking up the remaining 20%.
Marula decided to open an office in Zimbabwe after completing “an extensive due diligence” on potential projects in Zimbabwe, according to CEO Jason Brewer.
“Our team has been on the ground since the beginning of the year, and we are excited about the potential that Zimbabwe offers the company and the industry,” Brewer said.
Marula, which is pioneering lithium in South Africa, joins UK companies such as Premier African Minerals and Red Rock that have invested in Zimbabwe’s lithium prospects recently.
Larger Chinese companies Huayou Cobalt, Chengxin and Sinomine, are already advanced in building new mines and lithium processing facilities in the country.
Copper, also in demand globally, is also a draw for Marula, to which Brewer noted:
“Additionally, Zimbabwe is home to over 70 known copper deposits, and copper mining has experienced a revival in the country, coinciding with an increase in copper prices,” Brewer adds.
Marula’s other interests in Africa include the Blesberg Lithium and Tantalum Mine in South Africa, Nkombwa Hill Project in Zambia, as well as Tanzania’s Kinusi Copper mine, Bagamoyo Graphite Project and the Nyorinyori Graphite Project.
Zimbabwe’s last major copper operation, Mhangura, shut down in 2000 as global copper prices collapsed.
The country has since launched a plan called the Greater Chinhoyi Copper Development programme to revive six copper assets run by the state-owned Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation.
In 2021, ZMDC reached an agreement with China’s Zhi Jui Mining Resource to start processing dumps at Mhangura.
Apart from Mhangura, ZMDC’s other copper operations are Alaska and Sanyati. Both are idle, despite attempts to restore the Alaska refinery and repurpose it for chrome.
Bringing all ZMDC copper operations back to full production – including underground mining, a new refinery and smelter – would need an investment of as much as US$500 million, according to a ZMDC estimate.
Leave Comments