Rio Tinto restarts South African mineral sands project

· Michael West

Rio Tinto has approved the restart of Richards Bay Minerals’ $US473 million ($A668 ‌million) Zulti South project in South Africa, six years after halting ‌the venture due to community unrest.

Richards Bay Minerals, 74 per cent-owned by Rio Tinto, mines the mineral-rich sands of South Africa’s KwaZulu-Natal province, extracting mostly ‌zircon, rutile, ‌ilmenite ⁠and titanium oxide used in the ​manufacture of paint, sunscreen and smartphones.

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The Zulti South project is key to Richards Bay Minerals’ plans to extend the life of its ⁠operations to ‌2050 ​as the ore body at Zulti North declines, ​the company ‌said in a statement on Monday.

“The decision to proceed ​also reflects improved security conditions and strengthened community partnerships,” Richards Bay Minerals managing director ​Werner ​Duvenhage said.

China ​Harbour Engineering Company has ‌been appointed as the engineering, procurement and construction contractor for the project.

Construction is scheduled to start during the first quarter of 2026, with ​initial commercial production expected in the fourth ​quarter of ⁠2028.

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