Type | Private |
---|---|
Industry | Mining |
Founded | 1992 |
Headquarters | Vancouver, Canada 49°17′07″N 123°06′59″W / 49.285220°N 123.116452°W Quito, Ecuador 0°10′43″S 78°28′46″W / 0.178517°S 78.479419°W |
Key people | Jin Shouhua, Chairman (CEO) Li Dongquing (Senior VP) |
Products | Copper |
Number of employees | 98 (2008) |
Website | www |
Corriente Resources was a multinational corporation based in Canada that completed feasibility studies and environmental impact assessments (EIA) for open-pit copper mines in the Ecuadorian rainforest, including the Mirador mine. The Mirador mine is the first industrial scale copper mine to be developed in Ecuador.[1] Corriente Resources also completed explorations of the San Carlos Panantza mine, although development of that project was halted in 2020 by Indigenous opposition.[2]
The EIA for Mirador mine was approved in 2006, and a feasibility study for 30,000 tonnes per day production of copper-gold concentrate was completed in 2008. In 2010, the company was taken over by state-owned Chinese companies Tongling Nonferrous Metals Group Holdings Co. Ltd. and China Railway Construction Corp. Ltd. through their jointly owned subsidiary CRCC-Tongguan Investment Co. Ltd.[1][3][4]
Chinese companies began construction of Mirador mine in 2012, investing approximately $1.4 billion into the project and exporting the first shipment of copper from the mine to China in 2019. Agreements between China and Ecuador to develop the project met with popular resistance and led to protests in 2012 led by the Confederation of Indigenous Nationalities of Ecuador.[5]
History
Corriente Resources was incorporated in 1992. About 2000, it entered into an agreement with BHP Billiton, buying mining concessions in the Amazon Rainforest in Ecuador.[6]
Through a community relations campaign, Corriente Resources was able to win over many of the inhabitants of the area that will be affected by the mine, spending money. However, in 2006 a local resistance movement was formed, which then took some mining camps. Another group of locals, supported by the corporation, resisted the take, and there was a fistfight.[7]
Due to its economic power, Corriente Resources not only has influenced Ecuadorian president Rafael Correa, but also local authorities in Zamora Chinchipe and Morona Santiago provinces, where the corporation operates. In early 2009, during a demonstration against the corporation in the town of San Miguel de Conchay in Morona Santiago, the village chief, Hernán Samaniego, issued a death threat against Vicente Zhunio, one of the copper mine's opponents.[8] [9]
Mirador Project
Mirador is Corriente Resources' main project in Ecuador. It is located on coordinates 3°34′12″S 78°26′05″W / 3.570046°S 78.434687°W, near the town of Gualaquiza on the western slope of the Cordillera del Cóndor mountain range.[10]
Corriente Resources plans to extract 30 thousand tonnes of copper ore per day for about 17 years, producing a sum total of 145 million tonnes of waste, which will be dumped near the open pit, in the middle of the rainforest. Corriente Resources believes it will use 10 thousand cubic meters of water per day, an amount equivalent to the water used by 20 thousand people in Ecuador's cities daily. Corriente Resources plans to build a dam near the Quimi River to hold the water produced by the mine.[10][11]
Corriente Resources plans to invest $533 million upfront.[10]
To export the copper, Corriente Resources will build port facilities in Puerto Bolívar on the Pacific coast of Ecuador, 250 miles from the mine.[10]
In July 2009, Corriente Resources announced it had gotten the go ahead from the Environment Ministry and the Water Department of Ecuador to begin digging the open-pit mine.[12]
Substantial Shareholders
The following own 5 percent or more of Corriente Resources' stock:[13]
Name | Occupation | Business Address | Share of Stock |
---|---|---|---|
CRCC-TONGGUAN INVESTMENT (CANADA) CO., LTD. | Offeror owns 78,922,393 Common Shares of Corriente representing 100% of the Common Shares of Corriente | 800 West Pender Street Suite 520 Vancouver, BC V6C 2V6 |
100 http://www.corriente.com/media/PDFs/news/2010/20100804-CRIPressRelease.pdf |
References
- 1 2 "Mirador Copper-Gold Project, Zamora-Chinchipe Province, Ecuador". Retrieved 2022-07-02.
- ↑ "Strife with indigenous groups could derail Ecuador's drive to be a mining power". Reuters. 2020-12-10. Retrieved 2022-07-03.
- ↑ "Canada miners jump after Chinese bid for Corriente". Reuters. 2009-12-29. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
- ↑ "Corriente accepts $379M takeover offer by Tongling, China Railway | SaltWire". saltwire. 2019-02-20. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
- ↑ "Ecuador indigenous protesters march against mining". BBC News. 2012-03-09. Retrieved 2022-07-02.
- ↑ Corriente Resources. "History".
- ↑ Santiago Kingman. "Minería en territorio Shuar". Ecuador Terra Incognita.
- ↑ Amnesty International. "Urgent Action" (PDF).
- ↑ Coordinadora Nacional Por la Defensa de la Vida y la Soberanía. "Ecuador: Carta al Ministro de Minas y Petróleos".
- 1 2 3 4 Corriente Resources. "Mirador Copper-Gold Project: 30,000 TPD Feasibility Study" (PDF).
- ↑ FAO. "AQUASTAT".
- ↑ Corriente Resources. "News Release".
- ↑ U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. "Company Information: Corriente Resources Inc".