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Contents

   



(Top)
 


1 History  



1.1  Formation and expansion  





1.2  19511988: SFR Yugoslavia  





1.3  1990s2000s  





1.4  20072008 failed purchases  





1.5  20082017  





1.6  2017present  







2 Organization  





3 Criticism  



3.1  Air pollution  







4 Gallery  





5 See also  





6 References  





7 External links  














Serbia Zijin Bor Copper






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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
 

(Redirected from Zijin Bor Copper)

Serbia Zijin Bor Copper
Company typed.o.o.
IndustryCopper mining and smelting
Founded18 December 2018; 5 years ago (2018-12-18) (Current form)
1904; 120 years ago (1904) (Founded)
Headquarters ,

Area served

Worldwide

Key people

Ximing Jian (General director)
Long Yi (vice president)
Shen Shaoyang (supervisory board president)
Lin Hongfu (board member)
Que Chaoyang (board member)
Jovica Radisavljević (Execute Director of Zijin) [1]
ProductsCopper wires, Copper bars, Gold

Production output

  • 43,000 tonnes of copper
  • 5 tonnes of silver
  • 700 kilograms of gold
  • (2017)[2]
    RevenueIncrease 465.42 million (2019)[3]

    Net income

    Decrease €27.78 million (2019)[3]
    Total assetsIncrease €763.54 million (2019)[4]
    Total equityIncrease €443.23 million (2019)[4]
    OwnerZijin Mining (63%)
    Government of Serbia (37%)

    Number of employees

    5,155 (2019)
    5,474 (2020)[5]
    ParentZijin Mining
    SubsidiariesCopper Mine Bor
    Copper Mine Majdanpek
    Smelter and Refinery
    Websitezijinbor.com
    Footnotes / references
    Business ID: 07130562
    Tax ID: 100570195
    [6]

    Serbia Zijin Bor Copper, formerly known as RTB Bor, is a copper mining and smelting complex located in Bor, Serbia.

    History

    [edit]
    Lectra Haul dump truck in Bor.
    Panoramic view on RTB Bor.

    Formation and expansion

    [edit]

    The first geological explorations of copper ore in Bor area were conducted in 1897 and covered the area at the time called "Tilva Roš".[7] The explorations were performed by the Serbian industrialist Đorđe Vajfert, who later provided investments of capital from France and set up a company called the "French Society of the Bor Mines, the Concession St. George". The company, with its headquarters in Paris, started operations on 1 June 1904.[7] The French capital remained in Bor until the end of the World War II.

    1951–1988: SFR Yugoslavia

    [edit]

    In 1951, the company's assets were nationalized by the Government of SFR Yugoslavia. Since then, the company Bor was in the state ownership.[7]

    From 1951 until 1988, the company has changed its organizational structure, from the "organization of associated labor" to state-owned enterprise "RTB Bor".[7]

    1990s–2000s

    [edit]

    During 1993, following the breakup of SFR Yugoslavia and the outbreak of the Yugoslav Wars, RTB Bor made various investments which further initiated opening of the new mining operations such as new pit mine called "Cerovo".[7]

    Since the mid-1990s and during the time of sanctions on the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia, production in the RTB Bor dropped significantly from the very prosperous 1970s and 1980s. This has been due to both diminishing reserves and the inability to obtain new equipment that would most efficiently gather the remaining ore, which is no longer of such a high grade. Copper mining as the key basis of Bor's economy had significant effects on Bor's inhabitants due to decreased production during the 1990s and 2000s.[citation needed]

    2007–2008 failed purchases

    [edit]

    In March 2007, the Government of Serbia sold RTB Bor to the Romanian Cuprom for a sum of US$400 million.[8] Cuprom pledged to modernize the production facilities in RTB Bor and Majdanpek mine, in order to improve the productivity levels. However, due to Cuprom's failure to meet a deadline regarding the financing, the Government of Serbia had cut the deal and the complex was put up for privatization once again.

    In February 2008, following the second tender, RTB Bor was sold to the Austrian A-TEC for a sum of $466 million plus obligation to invest $180.4 million in facilities.[9]

    After the signing of the contract was made, the first $150 million was delivered by A-TEC.[10] However, the problems arose after A-TEC missed its deadline for the second payment at $230 million, due to A-TEC's trouble to secure bank guarantees due to the global recession caused by the financial crisis of 2007–2008.[11] A-TEC was not permitted to see returned the $150 million it had already paid. The Government of Serbia later voted to scrap the contract and offer Oleg Deripaska's Strikeforce Mining and Resources (SMR) as the second ranked bidder a chance to purchase RTB Bor.[12] However, after a set of negotiations, SMR decided not to increase their first offer and the second tender had officially failed.[13]

    2008–2017

    [edit]

    For more than two decades, RTB Bor has been among the most unprofitable Serbian companies, with the accumulated debt of more than 1 billion euros.[14] However, the Government of Serbia kept investing hundreds of millions euros in new production facilities, and even wrote off company's debts worth 1 billion euros to the government-owned companies such as Elektroprivreda Srbije.[14]

    Even with high copper prices on global markets, RTB Bor continued with financial losses.[15] For calendar year 2015 net loss was around 110 million euros and for 2016 it amounted to 42 million euros.[15]

    In 2017, Greek Mytilineos Holdings won a multi-year trial against RTB Bor before the Geneva Arbitration Tribunal, seeking $40 million for failure to fulfill the contract and subsequent financial losses.[16] During the 1990s, RTB Bor imported the copper concentrate from Mytilineos, processed it, but never sent back 4,000 tonnes of processed copper to the Greek company.[16] Mytilineos has also launched several other lawsuits against RTB Bor over the non-fulfilled contracts signed during the 1990s.[16]

    In 2017, according to the general director Spaskovski, RTB Bor had a positive net result after years of net losses, with $306 million (€255 million) of revenues and $73 million (€61 million) of EBITDA.[2] For 2017, around 18 million tonnes of ore was mined, of which 235,000 tonnes of concentrate was processed and finally, 43,000 tonnes of copper, 5 tonnes of silver and 700 kilograms of gold was obtained.[2] Around 75% of the processed copper is exported, while the rest is being further processed by domestic copper companies "Valjaonica bakra Sevojno" and "Pometon".[17]

    2017–present

    [edit]

    In 2017, the Government of Serbia was obliged to find a strategic partner or buyer by March 2018, in a memorandum with the International Monetary Fund (IMF).[14] The sale was later postponed until June 2018.[18] Three companies – Zijin Mining from China, Diamond Fields International from Canada and U Gold from Russia – placed bids in a tender for a strategic partner.[19] The Serbian government has chosen the Chinese Zijin Mining Group as its strategic partner for the copper mining and smelting complex, RTB Bor.

    On 31 August 2018, Chinese mining company Zijin Mining took over 63% of shares of the company, in a $1.26 billion deal with the Government of Serbia.[20] On 18 December 2018, Zijin Mining formally took over the company under new name "Zijin Bor Copper". Later, it was announced that suffix "Serbia" will be added.[21] For 2018 calendar year, Zijin Bor Copper had net income of around 760 million euros, with most of it coming from debts conversion into shares.[22]

    Organization

    [edit]

    RTB Bor Group is composed of the following subsidies:

    The ledges of the Zijin Bor Copper are located in the southwestern part of the Carpathian Mountains and are mostly of porphyry type within the Upper Bor District eruptive area. The currently undeveloped underground site "Borska Reka", located within the Jama mine, represents a very significant potential mineral resource.[citation needed]

    The overview of total resources:

    Name Category Amount [t] Cu(%) Au(%) Ag(%)
    Veliki Krivelj A 91,713,587 0.33 0.7 0.39
    Veliki Krivelj B 333,306,825 0.35 0.7 0.39
    Veliki Krivelj C1 135,439,825 0.29 0.7 0.39
    Tilva Ros B 3,889,738 0.76 0.33 1.06
    Brezanic A 1,972,350 1.28 0.27 1.93
    Borska reka A+B+C1+C2 1,007,832,732 0.53 0.16 1.69
    Cerovo complex – Cementacija 2 26,580,420 0.31 0.07 1.08
    Cerovo complex – Cementacija 4 4,027,930 0.28 0.07 1.06
    Cerovo complex – Cerovo 238,358,600 0.31 0.108 0.77
    Main Cerovo complex – Drenovo 45,777,880 0.38 0.062 1.38
    Cerovo complex – Kraku Bukaresku 1,600,000 0.62 0.62 2.21

    Criticism

    [edit]

    Air pollution

    [edit]

    Several protests has been held in Bor in eastern Serbia over excessive air pollution that has been intensified since Zijin took over copper miner Rudarsko-Topioničarski Basen (RTB) in late 2018. Since January 2019, Bor has been struggling with excessive air pollution, with sulfur dioxide (SO2) levels topping 2,000 micrograms per cubic meter, up from the maximum allowed 350. Protesters demanded that the city government urgently adopt a plan so that the line ministry and state inspectorates can react to the alarming pollution levels in Bor. As early as April 2019, the inspector had ordered the company to take action against air pollution of the environment, human health and the environment, because it emitted excessive SO2. Zijin then explained in a letter to the Ministry of Environment that the power outage had caused pollution. However, control a few months later, in August, showed another omission – Zijin did not have a system for wet dust removal during the transportation of tailings on the Bor mine, which also threatened human health and the environment. Zijin was ordered to solve the problem, and the company later told the Ministry that a dust suppression system had been installed, which was put to trial. In November 2019, CINS sought an interview with Zijin on the topic of air pollution, to which the company responded with a press release. It says that by the end of the year, the company will have a total of five SO2-neutralized dust spray machines. Documentation obtained by CINS shows that by that time, two of the machines purchased had been in operation for about two months, but pollution data showed that it had no significant effect on the reduction of sulfur dioxide.[23][24]

    [edit]

    See also

    [edit]

    References

    [edit]
    1. ^ "Zijin Bor Copper Appoints Mr Ximing Jian as New Managing Director". Archived from the original on 1 October 2020. Retrieved 9 September 2020.
  • ^ a b c "RTB Bor beleži 7 puta veću zaradu". b92.net (in Serbian). 31 December 2017. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  • ^ a b БИЛАНС УСПЕХА (2019) – РТБ Бор. apr.gov.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  • ^ a b "БИЛАНС СТАЊА (2019) – РТБ Бор". apr.gov.rs. Retrieved 22 December 2020.
  • ^ https://www.kolektiv.co.rs/media/kolektiv/2319.pdf [bare URL PDF]
  • ^ Основни подаци о привредном друштву. apr.gov.rs (in Serbian). Serbian Business Registers Agency. Retrieved 28 February 2018.
  • ^ a b c d e "Istorijat". rtb.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 7 February 2018.
  • ^ Cuprom Romania wins US$400-million (€303-million) bid for Serbian copper complex – International Herald Tribune
  • ^ "News – Business & Economy – Austrian A-TEC buys RTB Bor". B92. Archived from the original on 24 October 2012. Retrieved 26 March 2013.
  • ^ "UPLAĆENO 150 MILIONA DOLARA ZA RTB BOR". balkanmagazin.net. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  • ^ "A-TEC Industries announces breakdown of talks on RTB Bor acquisition" (PDF). a-tecindustries.com. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  • ^ "Govt. votes unanimously to scrap A-TEC contract". b92.net. Fonet, Beta. Archived from the original on 25 October 2012. Retrieved 22 August 2013.
  • ^ Bazel has refused to purchase copper combine in Serbia | Forex & Finance Archived 2 November 2009 at archive.today
  • ^ a b c Telesković, Anica (26 December 2017). "Tender za RTB Bor do kraja marta 2018. godine". politika.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  • ^ a b Rabrenović, Jovana (13 November 2017). Цена бакра расла у 2016., РТБ Бор репризирао губитке. politika.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  • ^ a b c "Srbija dug RTB Bor plaća grčkoj firmi na četiri rate". insajder.net (in Serbian). 26 January 2018. Retrieved 29 January 2018.
  • ^ "Bakar iz Bora na ceni, za njega plaćaju premiju". b92.net (in Serbian). Tanjug. 30 January 2017. Retrieved 1 February 2018.
  • ^ "Odlaže se prodaja RTB Bor". blic.rs (in Serbian). Tanjug. 20 February 2018. Retrieved 21 February 2018.
  • ^ "Serbia receives three bids in tender for RTB Bor strategic partner". SeeNews. 21 August 2018. Retrieved 21 August 2018.
  • ^ Jamasmie, Cecilia (31 August 2018). "China's Zijin wins race for Serbia's largest copper mine". mining.com. Retrieved 9 September 2018.
  • ^ Кинески „Зиђин”преузео РТБ „Бор". kolektiv.co.rs (in Serbian). 18 December 2018. Retrieved 20 December 2018.
  • ^ Obradović, M. (16 July 2019). "Otpisi dugova i isplata koncesije napumpali profit". danas.rs (in Serbian). Retrieved 10 August 2019.
  • ^ "Serbia Zijin Bor Copper sued over air pollution levels". 2 December 2019. Retrieved 2 December 2019.
  • ^ "Zijin Company in court for air pollution in Bor, Serbia". 25 February 2020. Retrieved 25 February 2020.
  • [edit]
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