Home Global Ties KCM of Zambia receives US$ 1 billion cash infusion from Vedanta

KCM of Zambia receives US$ 1 billion cash infusion from Vedanta

149

(3 minutes read)

Zambia’s largest copper mine KCM has received a cash injection of US$1 billion from its parent company, ending a years-long legal battle and also saving the company from liquidation.

Zambia’s largest copper mine KCM has received a cash injection of US$1 billion from its parent company, ending a years-long legal battle and also saving the company from liquidation.

London-listed Vedanta is the majority owner of Zambia’s largest copper mining firm Konkola Copper Mines (KCM), which has been at the centre of a standoff with the government. The state-owned ZCCM-IH is a minority shareholder in KCM.

Read Also:

https://trendsnafrica.com/namibia-and-zambia-signed-vital-cooperation-agreements/

In 2019, the Zambian government placed KCM in liquidation proceedings after accusing KCM of violating its operational license and not paying all its taxes, sparking a four-year legal battle with Vedanta. KCM’s liquidation process has now been halted and Vedanta will continue to run the mines as the majority shareholder with a 79.4 percent stake, the government said Tuesday (Sep. 05). The KCM board will be reinstated and Vedanta Resources Limited will return to its previous role as the majority shareholders,” the country’s mining minister told a press conference in Lusaka. The firm will enjoy “a renewed financing commitment towards investment in mine development and to increase production,” mining minister Paul Kabuswe said.

Zambia is Africa’s second-biggest copper-producing country on the continent after the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the sector is a major employerLondon-based mining Vedanta has said it will invest in developing KCM over the next five years. Vedanta also pledged to invest US$20 million into the local mining community annually.

Read Also:

https://trendsnafrica.com/zambia-vedanta-retains-kcm-and-pumps-in-us-1-million/

In 2015, some 2,500 villagers filed a claim in London against KCM for alleged toxic pollution caused by water discharged from its unit Nchanga Copper Mine, situated in Zambia’s central Copperbelt region. The mining firm agreed to settle the claims in 2021. The terms of the deal were not disclosed. The Zambian government which grapples with a huge debt aims for an annual production of 3 million tons of copper within the next 10 years.