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    Chile runoff and Codelco: project pipeline and capex risks for mine planners

    December 11, 2025|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Chile runoff and Codelco: project pipeline and capex risks for mine planners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Chile’s 14 December presidential runoff will decide how Jeannette Jara’s plan for a 10% increase in mining output, expanded state role in lithium and higher renewable penetration competes with José Antonio Kast’s $6 billion public spending cuts and lean-state agenda. Codelco, carrying more than $20 billion in debt after output fell to a 25‑year low in 2022 and still required to remit 70% of profits plus 10% of sales to the state, faces constrained reinvestment. Any policy misstep risks undermining Chile’s $105 billion mining investment pipeline to 2034 and global copper and lithium supply.

    Technical Brief

    • Production had only just begun recovering in 2024 after a 25‑year output low reached in 2022.
    • Ageing infrastructure across Codelco’s legacy divisions is flagged as a core constraint on sustaining nameplate capacity.
    • Legal remittances of 70% of profits plus 10% of sales structurally limit internal funding for brownfield upgrades.
    • Chile’s 2025 GDP forecast of 2.5% falls to near‑zero without mining, underscoring sectoral dependency.
    • Kast’s fiscal plan targets $6 billion cuts from an $82 billion national budget via broad state audits.
    • Jara’s industrial platform explicitly couples mining expansion with accelerated renewable power build‑out and state lithium participation.
    • Investors quoted frame the election as a “referendum” on balancing resource nationalism with foreign capital access.

    Our Take

    With Codelco already carrying more than $20 billion in debt while being obliged to transfer 70% of profits and 10% of sales to the state, any fiscal tightening to trim $6 billion from Chile’s $82 billion budget would likely constrain its ability to self-fund large brownfield and smelting upgrades.

    The recent MoU between Codelco and Glencore for a Chilean copper smelter capable of handling 1.5 million dry tonnes of concentrate suggests that whichever administration governs through 2030 will inherit a capital-intensive downstream build-out, not just decisions on mine output volumes.

    In our database of 265 mining stories, Codelco appears more frequently in relation to copper and critical minerals strategy than most other Latin American state miners, signalling that Chile’s electoral outcome will be watched as a bellwether for state-led copper and lithium policy across the region.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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