Iron mining in Chile
Since at least 2010 Chile's has each year produced 0.6% to 0.7% of all iron mined in the world.[1] Production has risen from 6.8 million metric tonnes in 2010 to more than 10 million metric tonnes each year beginning 2021.[1] As of 2023 about 15% of the value of Chilean iron exports comes from iron ore pellets and the remaining from bulk ore.[2] The northern regions of Atacama and Coquimbo hosts all iron mining in Chile.[2] Until 2014 Antofagasta Region was also active in iron mining.[2] In the 2014–2023 period iron ore has stood each year for 0.9 to 2.6% of the total value of Chilean exports.[2] Most iron ore mined in Chile is exported to China and far behind South Korea and Bahrain are important markets.[2]
Mining of iron ore deposits along the Chilean Iron Belt have been facilitated by their proximity to the ports of export at the coast, and this had in particular had an impact for the economic viability of small iron ore deposits.[3] Compañía Minera del Pacífico (CMP) is largest iron mining company in Chile and is through its parent company Compañía de Acero del Pacífico (CAP) a member of Consejo Minero.[4][5] Compañia Minera del Pacífico has three main mines each with its own port for export.[6] Near Copiapó the company owns Cerro Negro Norte mine which uses the port of Punta Totoralillo, further south the company is in ownership of Los Colorados mine which uses the port of Guacolda II, and near the city of La Serena El Romeral mine is operated using the port of Guayacán in Coquimbo.[6]
In medium-scale iron mining in Chile the mines and deposits of El Carmen, Huantemé, Cerro Imán and El Dorado are important.[7]
The Dominga project led by Andes Iron seeks to establish a new iron and copper mine near the coast of northern Coquimbo Region.[8] This project has proved controversial for political and environmental reasons.[8]
Iron mining in Chile is thought to have the potential to produce cobalt as by-product.[9][10]
Civil engineer Carlos Vattier and geologist Juan Brüggen were among the first to assess the ores of the Chilean Iron Belt in the late 19th century and early 20th century.[11][12][7][13] Iron mining industry in the Chilean Iron Belt have had a significant presence of Chilean Hungarians entrepreneurs since the 1950s.[14][15][16]
Largest iron mines in Chile
Mine | Type | Tons of iron | Year of production |
Year of opening |
Owners | Sources |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cerro Negro Norte | Open-pit | 4,000,000 | 2021 | 2010 | Compañía Minera del Pacífico | [17] |
Los Colorados | Open-pit | 2,559,000 | 2021 | 1997 | Compañía Minera del Pacífico | [18] |
El Romeral | Open-pit | 2,573,000 | 2021 | 1956 | Compañía Minera del Pacífico | [19][20] |
Geology
In Chile most economically viable iron ores are massive bodies of magnetite with secondary hematite and apatite.[21][22] The shape of the ore bodies vary but is often lenticular or irregular, yet in other cases it form veins or stratiform deposits.[23] With few exceptions these deposits lie along the Chilean Iron Belt. The iron ores are typically hosted by volcanic rocks of andeistic composition and of Early Cretaceous age (Neocomian).[21] These ores are thought to have deposited in graben-like structures.[21] Near the surface the magnetite tend to altered by weathering into hematite (martitization) and pyrite is weathered to limonite.[23] Some hematite in the form of specularite that is found in the ores is primary though.[23] Breccias containing low-grade ore are often found around the more massive high-grade ores.[23] Various iron ore deposits have elongated and deep wedges of country rock identified as roof pendants.[21]
The host rocks have typically secondary amphibolite, scapolite, biotite, chlorite that are the product of hydrothermal alteration or contact metamorphism.[21]
References
- ^ a b Cifras actualizadas de la minería (Report) (in Spanish). Consejo Minero. 2025-03-01. p. 4.
- ^ a b c d e Anuario de estadisticas del cobre y otros minerales [Yearbook: Copper and Other Mineral Statistics: 2004 2023] (Report). Comisión Chilena del Cobre. 2024.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 92.
- ^ "CMP". Consejo Minero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-05-10.
- ^ "Grupo minero CAP se incorpora al Consejo Minero y se conveirte en la primera productora de hierro en sumarse a la entidad gremial". Portal Minero (in Spanish). 2017-07-03. Retrieved 2025-04-30.
- ^ a b "Iron Market". CMP. Retrieved 2025-05-14.
- ^ a b Millán 1999, p. 192.
- ^ a b Laborde, Antonia (2024-12-10). "El millonario proyecto minero Dominga vuelve a las manos del Gobierno de Boric". El País (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-05-15.
- ^ Townley, Brian; Díaz, Alejandro; Luca, Rodrigo (2017). Exploration and mining potential for cobalt mineral resources in Chile (Report).
- ^ Fernández Montero, Gastón. "Perspectivas y oportunidades del «oro azul» para Chile". guiaminera.cl (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-07-01.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 21.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 23.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 193.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 95.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 110.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 113.
- ^ "Cerro Negro Norte". Consejo Minero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-05-09.
- ^ "Mina Los Colorados". Consejo Minero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-05-09.
- ^ "Minas El Romeral". Consejo Minero (in Spanish). Retrieved 2025-05-09.
- ^ Millán 1999, p. 83.
- ^ a b c d e Ruiz et al. 1968, p. 323.
- ^ Pizarro Barraza, Felipe Andrés (2022). Caracterización geológica y patrimonial de los distritos mineros de hierro de Sositas y Huantemé, en el valle del Huasco, región de Atacama, Chile (Thesis) (in Spanish). Universidad de Atacama. Retrieved 2025-05-20.
- ^ a b c d Ruiz et al. 1968, p. 326.
Bibliography
- Millán, Augusto (1999). Historia de la minería del hierro en Chile (in Spanish). Santiago de Chile: Editorial Universitaria. ISBN 956-11-1499-2.
- Ruiz, C.; Ortiz, F.; Moraga, A.; A., Aguilar (1968). Genesis of the Chilean Iron ore Deposits of Mesozoic age. XXIII International Geological Conference. Vol. 7. Czechoslovakia. pp. 323–338.