Pressure Leaching of Copper Concentrates

1 October 25th, 2004 Pressure Leaching of Copper Concentrates John O. Marsden Senior Vice President –Technology & Product Development...

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Pressure Leaching of Copper Concentrates John O. Marsden Senior Vice President – Technology & Product Development

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October 25th, 2004

Presentation Outline

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Safety share



Introduction  Global copper reserves/resources  Phelps Dodge production & reserves profile



Commercial drivers for copper concentrate leaching



The copper concentrate market and TC/RCs



Phelps Dodge copper pressure leaching developments  High temperature  Medium temperature



Critical success factors for commercialization



Conclusions

October 25th, 2004

Safety Share - Bagdad Concentrate Leach Project 

Construction Safety Record (total project)

 Total man hours 330,000  Lost time injuries 0  Recordable injuries 3  First aid treatment 9  Near miss incidents 7  Recordable Injury Frequency Rate = 1.86 (per 200,000 man hours) 

Operations & Maintenance (project to date)

 Lost time injuries 0  Recordable injuries 0  First aid treatment 2  Near miss incidents 18 (2004 YTD)  Recordable Injury Frequency Rate = 0  651 Zero days since project start 3

October 25th, 2004

Global Copper Industry by Process Type

2003 Production (Est.)

Remaining Reserves (Est.) 11%

10%

9%

10%

80%

80% Mill, Smelt (cpy/cc) Leach, SX/EW (cc) Leach, SX/EW (ox)

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Mill, Smelt or Con Leach (cpy/cc) Leach, SX/EW (cc) Leach, SX/EW (ox)

October 25th, 2004

Potential Phelps Dodge Production Profile by Process Type

2004 Production

2010 Production

2%

18%

20%

24%

34%

22%

36%

44%

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Mill, Con Leach (cpy/cc)

Mill, Smelt (cpy/cc)

Leach, SX/EW (cc)

Leach, SX/EW (ox)

October 25th, 2004

Technology Transformation of Copper Production (PDC share; millions of pounds)

2,500

2,000

1983 – 100% conventional 2003 – 70% SX/EW

1,500

1,000

500

0 85

86

87

88

89

90

91

92

93

94

95

Conventional 6

96

97

98

99

00

01

02

03

04F

SX/EW October 25th, 2004

Phelps Dodge Mineral Reserves Profile by Process Type

17%

24%

59%

Mill, Con Leach or Smelt (cpy/cc) Leach, SX/EW (cc) Leach, SX/EW (ox)

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October 25th, 2004

Drivers for Concentrate Leaching

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Cost effective alternative to conventional smelting & refining



Capital cost versus greenfield smelter/refinery projects  $1,000-2,000 versus $3,000-6,000/annual tonne  Ability to utilize existing SX capacity ($300-400/annual mt)  Ability to utilize spare EW capacity ($500-600/annual mt)  Ability to utilize existing infrastructure



TC/RCs – Commercial third party smelting & refining rates



Operating cost  Oxygen requirements & cost  Altitude  Acid balance  Freight rates, distances, handling



Copper recovery



By-products (Au, Ag, other)



Smelter penalty elements (As, Sb, Bi, other) October 25th, 2004

Chalcopyrite Concentrate Pressure Leaching Options

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Atmospheric sulfate media  Attrition grind & ferric leach  Silver-catalyzed ferric leach  Biological ferric leach



Pressure sulfate  High temperature (>200oC)  Medium temperature (>100oC <200oC)  Chloride-assisted



Halide system  Chloride  Chloride-bromide



Ammonia

October 25th, 2004

Factors Affecting Process Selection

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Deposit characteristics



Concentrate mineralogy



Concentrate grade



Location  Stand-alone versus integrated at mine site



Site acid requirements



Regional acid market  Availability and cost



Acid neutralizing material  Availability and cost

October 25th, 2004

The Copper Processing Technology Today

Stockpile Leaching (Oxide) (Chalcocite)

Mine

Primary Crushing

Sec/Tert Crushing

Heap Leaching

Solution Extraction

(Oxide) (Chalcocite)

ElectroWinning Customers

Acid

Milling (Chalcocite) (Chalcopyrite)

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Flotation

Smelting

ElectroRefining

October 25th, 2004

Real TC/RCs and Copper Prices ($2002) Copper Prices (¢/lb)

Japanese TC/RCs

TC/RCs (¢/lb)

300

45

250

40 35

200

30 150 25 100

20 15

0

10

19 75 19 77 19 79 19 81 19 83 19 85 19 87 19 89 19 91 19 93 19 95 19 97 19 99 20 01 20 03

50

Copper Prices 12

TC/RCs

Linear (Copper Prices)

Linear (TC/RCs) October 25th, 2004

TC/RCs versus Price Long-term Japanese TC/RCs (1975 - 2003) 50.0 45.0 y = 0.1401x + 10.415 R2 = 0.7257

TC/RC- ¢/lb (Constant 2002$)

40.0 35.0 30.0 25.0

* 20.0 15.0 10.0 60

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80

100

120

140 160 180 Copper Price - ¢/lb (Constant 2002$)

200

220

240

260

October 25th, 2004

Forecast Real TC/RCs as a Percentage of Copper Price

35% 33% 31% 29% 27% 25% 23% 21% 19% 17%

19 75 19 77 19 79 19 81 19 83 19 85 19 87 19 89 19 91 19 93 19 95 19 97 19 99 20 01 20 03 20 05 20 07 20 09

15%

Source: Brook Hunt 14

October 25th, 2004

Greenfield Smelter Developments (1991-2002) (Cu kmt)

1,200 Others (9%) 1,000 800

Indonesia (21%) India (21%) China (49%)

600

TC/RC Minimum TariffProtection

400 200

Tariff-Protection

0 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Source: Brook Hunt 15

October 25th, 2004

Near-Term Shortfall in Copper Supply (Cu kmt)

Shortfall in mine production expected to be filled by concentrate production

25,000

3.8 MMt/a

20,000

15,000

10,000

Existing concentrate production w/ majority of restarts & all financed projects

5,000

Source: Brook Hunt 16

Scrap/Other SX/EW Production Copper Consumption

10 F 20

09 F 20

08 F 20

07 F 20

06 F 20

05 F 20

04 F 20

03 F 20

02 e 20

01 20

00 20

99 19

98 19

19

97

0

Concentrate Production SX/EW New Production October 25th, 2004

Primary Smelter Capacity vs. Mine Production (Cu kmt)

18,000 17,000

86%

16,000 15,000 14,000 13,000 82%

12,000 11,000 10,000

84%

9,000

Source: Brook Hunt 17

Smelter Capacity

Smelter Production

20 10

20 08

20 06

20 04

20 02

20 00

19 98

19 96

19 94

19 92

8,000

Mine Production October 25th, 2004

Phelps Dodge Copper Pressure Leaching Developments 

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Phelps Dodge (& Placer Dome) have developed a suite of proprietary processes, including:  High temperature process (HT)  Converts essentially all sulfide sulfur to acid  Maximizes acid production  Suitable for locations where dilute acid can be used beneficially  Medium temperature process (MT)  Converts a significant portion of sulfide sulfur to elemental sulfur  Lower oxygen costs  Minimizes acid production  Suitable for locations where dilute acid cannot be used beneficially

October 25th, 2004

Phelps Dodge Concentrate Leaching Milestones 

2Q 1998

Sulfate-based concentrate leaching development started



1999-2000

Batch testwork at Hazen Research, Dawson and Phelps Dodge Process Technology Center



2000-2001

Continuous Pilot Plant Testing



3Q 2001

Technology Development Agreement executed with Placer Dome



Nov 2001

Bagdad HT Project approved



Nov 2001

Engineering awarded to Kvaerner



Mar 25, 02

Construction started by KIC



Mar 6, 03

Wet commissioning begun



Mar 20, 03

Start-up: First concentrate feed



July 2003

All design parameters met, steady state operation

Four years from first testing to commercial demonstration 20

October 25th, 2004

Phelps Dodge Concentrate Leaching Milestones (cont.)

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April 2004

Bagdad MT-DEW Conversion approved



July 2004

Construction of MT-DEW started



1Q05

Commissioning of MT-DEW scheduled

October 25th, 2004

Concentrate Leaching – Alternative to Smelting & Refining Stockpile Leaching (Oxide) (Chalcocite) Acid

Mine

Primary Crushing

Sec/Tert Crushing

Heap Leaching (Oxide) (Chalcocite)

Solution Extraction

ElectroWinning Customers

Milling (Chalcocite) (Chalcopyrite)

Flotation

Concentrate Leaching

Smelting

ElectroRefining

Offers full cost benefit of $0.05-0.10/lb over smelting & refining 22

October 25th, 2004

Bagdad Concentrate Leach Plant

August, 2003

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October 25th, 2004

Concentrate Leach – Performance Summary

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Operated since March 2003  18 months continuous operation



All key design criteria achieved  Above design throughput  Above design availability  Above design copper extraction  Operating costs in line with expectations



Demonstrated technical and economic viability of high temperature process in the appropriate application, where the dilute acid can be used beneficially

October 25th, 2004

Bagdad Concentrate Leach - Copper Production

1,800

Production (tonnes)

1,600 1,400 1,200 1,000 800 600 400 200

M

ar -0 A 3 pr M 03 ay -0 Ju 3 n03 Ju l-0 A 3 ug -0 Se 3 p0 O 3 ct -0 N 3 ov -0 D 3 ec -0 Ja 3 n0 Fe 4 b0 M 4 ar -0 A 4 pr -0 M 4 ay -0 Ju 4 n04 Ju l-0 A 4 ug -0 Se 4 p04

0

Production (metric tons) 25

Design Basis Production October 25th, 2004

Start-up Data (adapted from McNulty, 1998) 160%

% of Design Capacity

140% 120% 100% 80% 60% 40% 20% 0% 0

5

10

15

20

25

30

35

40

Months Since Commissioning Bagdad Category 2 26

BCLP 3 Mo. Avg. Category 3

Category 1 Category 4 October 25th, 2004

Concentrate Leaching & Direct Electrowinning

Stockpile Leaching (Oxide) (Chalcocite)

Mine

Primary Crushing

Sec/Tert Crushing

Heap Leaching (Oxide) (Chalcocite)

Solution Extraction

ElectroWinning Customers

Milling (Chalcocite) (Chalcopyrite)

Flotation

Concentrate Leaching

ElectroWinning

Potential to provide additional full cost benefits of up to $0.05/lb copper over high temperature process (i.e. $0.10-0.15/lb total benefit) 27

October 25th, 2004

Concentrate Leach - MT-DEW-SX Process

Concentrate Super-fine grind

Pressure Leach

Tails

S

L

DEW

PLS from stockpile leach

SX

Stockpile Leach

EW

Cathode Cu 28

October 25th, 2004

Concentrate Leach – The Path Forward 

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Conversion of Bagdad to medium-temperature and direct electrowinning mode of operation under consideration  Construction started in 3Q04  Start up scheduled in 1Q05  Commercial demonstration complete by 4Q05

October 25th, 2004

Phelps Dodge Concentrate Leaching Developments

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High temperature (>200oC) and medium temperature (140-180oC) pressure leaching in sulfate media



Low cash cost alternative to smelting and refining



Safe, environmentally-sound



Acid balance is a critical cost driver



Concentrate, cathode and acid freight considerations



Ability to utilize existing SX and EW capacity



Utilize existing infrastructure

October 25th, 2004

Production Decisions Impacted by Concentrate/Acid Balance

External concentrate source

North American Concentrate • Bagdad • Sierrita • Chino (partial capacity) • Cobre • Morenci (off line)

Chino Smelter 650,000 tpy capacity (off line)

External acid source

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Candelaria concentrate

Miami Smelter 750,000 tpy capacity (operating)

North American Leach • Morenci • Bagdad • Sierrita • Chino • Tyrone (partial capacity) • Miami (partial capacity)

External acid consumer

October 25th, 2004

Concentrate Leach – Potential Applications

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Morenci  Preliminary feasibility study in progress  Scheduled for completion 4Q04



Cerro Verde primary sulfides  Preliminary feasibility study scheduled for 1Q05



El Abra primary sulfides



Other

October 25th, 2004

Copper Pressure Leaching – Critical Success Factors

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TC/RC market conditions  Long term view?



Ability to understand and exploit acid balance at site(s)



Materials of construction



Operating control  Mineralogy



Competitive advantage  Speed of implementation  Scale of implementation  Ability to apply to greater proportion of production



Other technical developments  Improve capital and operating costs



Environmental permitting



Intellectual property  A complex environment

October 25th, 2004