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    Quellaveco 1 Mt copper milestone: ramp-up and logistics lens for mine planners

    November 24, 2025|

    Reviewed by Tom Sullivan

    Quellaveco 1 Mt copper milestone: ramp-up and logistics lens for mine planners

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Anglo American’s Quellaveco mine in southern Peru has passed 1 million tonnes of copper produced since first concentrate in 2022 and is forecast to deliver 310,000–340,000 tonnes in 2024. The open-pit operation, developed at a cost of around US$5.5 billion and designed as a large-scale, low-cost producer, uses a 127 km slurry pipeline to the port of Ilo and a 1.5 km-long overland conveyor for ore transport. For planners, the ramp-up profile and stable throughput signal sustained concentrate volumes into regional smelting and shipping chains.

    Technical Brief

    • Automation and advanced process control are used to stabilise plant performance and maintain high utilisation.

    Our Take

    Copper pieces in our database this year increasingly feature Peru alongside Chile, signalling that Peruvian assets like Quellaveco are becoming more central to medium‑term supply expectations for smelters and traders.

    Within the 84 Projects‑tagged items, only a subset reach steady-state copper output in their first full operating years, so Quellaveco’s ramp-up performance will be watched as a benchmark for other large Andean greenfields.

    For Peruvian copper operations, consistent delivery at Quellaveco raises the bar on social licence and environmental performance expectations, as communities and regulators can now point to a modern large‑scale mine when negotiating conditions for new projects.

    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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