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Keith Jones

GENERAL MANAGER, SMALL MINE DEVELOPMENT
"Our approach starts with understanding each client's goals and adapting our strategies accordingly. At times, we may focus on development to access ore bodies, while other times, we concentrate on production to meet annual goals in ounces."

Tom Meuzelaar

FOUNDER AND OWNER, LIFE CYCLE GEO
"Machine learning can aid significantly in the identification of various water types which supports management strategies such as monitoring potential impacts across project boundaries. It is an indispensable tool in supporting ongoing measurement of water quality throughout the life cycle."

Florencia Rodríguez

EXECUTIVE BUSINESS MANAGER, YPF QUÍMICA
"The 4x4 Plan is an ambitious strategy to quadruple YPF's production and value in four years."

Carlos De Lion Neto

SOUTHERN CONE PRESIDENT, ARKEMA
"As the scale of sustainable products increases, it becomes easier to introduce these materials into both mature markets and developing markets."

Ben Pullinger and Craig Nelsen

PRESIDENT AND CEO (BP) AND CHAIRMAN (CN), ATEX RESOURCES
"If we consider current trends, such as shortened permitting timelines and national infrastructure investments, the future looks promising."

Iván Arriagada

CEO, ANTOFAGASTA MINERALS
"The next stage of our growth story has begun. In Q1 2024, we started the construction of the Centinela Second Concentrator Project, which will add a further 170,000 t/y of copper-equivalent production."

Mining, Water and Climate Change

Chile Mining 2024 - Digital Interactive
Desalination and recirculation preserve Chile’s scarcest resource

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Erika Gabriel

GENERAL MANAGER, BIZALAB
"Although we are smaller than a multinational company, our mineralogy specialization gives us a distinctive advantage in the market."

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RECENT PUBLICATIONS

MACIG 2025 - Mining in Africa Country Investment Guide

It is said that mining is a patient industry. Current demand projections are not. Demand for minerals deemed ‘critical’ is set to increase almost fourfold by 2030, according to the UN. Demand for nickel, cobalt and lithium is predicted to double, triple and rise ten-fold, respectively, between 2022 and 2050. The world will need to mine more copper between 2018 and 2050 than it has mined throughout history. 2050 is also the deadline to curb emissions before reaching a point of ‘no return.’ The pace of mineral demand and the consequences of not meeting it force the industry to act fast and take more risks. Mining cannot afford to be a patient industry anymore. The scramble for supply drives miners back to geological credentials, and therefore to places like the African Central Copperbelt.

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