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China`s CMOC Group Ltd. made a breakthrough in a long-running spat over mining royalties in the Democratic Republic of Congo, potentially paving the way for its massive stockpile of battery metals to start flowing to global markets.
CMOC and its state-owned partner Gécamines reached a [consensus on the royalties issue" at the Tenke Fungurume operation, according to a Hong Kong stock exchange filing Wednesday. Exports from Tenke - a major source of copper and one of the world`s biggest cobalt mines - have been blocked by Congolese authorities since last July because of the dispute.
No financial details of any agreement were given, and the filing made no mention of plans for exports. CMOC has kept the mine running throughout the dispute, and the hoard of copper and cobalt stuck in the African nation was worth about $1.5 billion by late February, according to Bloomberg calculations at that time.
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