Chile's Codelco Receives Approval for $1 Billion Desalination Plant
Published on by Water Network Research, Official research team of The Water Network in Business
Chile’s state-owned mining company Codelco, the largest copper producer in the world, received environmental approval this week to build a $1 billion desalination plant to supply water to its operations in the country’s northern region.
Reporting by Fabián Andrés Cambero; Writing by Luc Cohen
Mining, representative image, Source: Pexels, Labeled for Reuse
The go-ahead from the Antofagasta region’s environmental regulator will allow the company to expand its Radomiro Tomic mine and advance with an ambitious investment plan in its water-intensive mining operations in one of the driest deserts in the world.
The plant would be the second-largest desalination plant in the South American country, behind the one supplying BHP’s Escondida copper mine, the largest in the world. Chile is the world’s No. 1 exporter of the red metal.
Source: Reuters
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Taxonomy
- Mining Development
- Desalination
- Sea Water Desalinisation
- Sustainable Desalination
- Water Utility
- Utility Management
- Desalination Plant
- Desalination