(Reuters) -Commodity trader Trafigura has been forced to seek new funding for its $600 million copper-cobalt project in the Democratic Republic of Congo after the development overshot its budget, Bloomberg News reported on Wednesday.
The project being developed by Chemaf SA, a longtime partner of Trafigura, has run into difficulties amid cost overruns and weak cobalt prices, Bloomberg reported, citing people familiar with the matter.
“Trafigura has been working with Chemaf to review options for the Mutoshi and Etoile development projects in light of challenging market conditions, which include persistently low cobalt prices and inflationary pressures facing the mining industry,” a Trafigura spokesperson said.
“Trafigura remains committed to the Democratic Republic of Congo and building its presence in fast-growing battery metals markets.”
Last year, Trafigura announced a $600 million loan facility to develop one of the largest copper and cobalt mines in Congo at Mutoshi, along with a processing plant in Kolwezi, and the expansion of the Etoile mine and processing plant in Lubumbashi.
However, the project has overshot its budget and cannot be completed with the current loan facility, Bloomberg reported.
As a result, Trafigura has been sounding out investors who could provide additional money to help complete the project. It is seeking additional funding of about $200 million to $300 million, Bloomberg reported.
In February, Trafigura said it had booked a $577 million charge in the first half of 2023 after discovering that some nickel cargoes it had received from other companies did not contain the metal.
(Reporting by Brijesh Patel in Bengaluru and Polina Devitt in London; Editing by Jason Neely and Jan Harvey)