KINSHASA, Oct 23 (Reuters) - The International Finance
Corporation (IFC) and Australian-based fund manager Taurus
Mining have agreed to invest $162.5 million in one of Democratic
Republic of Congo's largest copper mines, its owner Tiger
Resources TGS.AX said on Friday.
The $40.5 million loan from the IFC, the private lending arm
of the World Bank, will be its first investment in Congo's
mining sector since the government expropriated a mine owned by
First Quantum Minerals FM.TO in 2010, in which the IFC held a
stake.
The investment still requires final approval from the IFC's
Board of Directors, Tiger said in a statement.
Taurus Mining Finance Fund will lend an additional $122
million to Tiger to help refinance existing debt and expand the
Kipoi Copper Project in southeastern Congo, the statement added.
Tiger aims to expand copper cathode production at Kipoi,
which began in May 2014, from 25,000 to 32,500 tonnes per year
by November 2016.
Congo, Africa's leading copper producer, mined over 1
million tonnes of the metal for the first time in 2014.
The chamber of mines expects output to dip this year due to
electricity shortages and Glencore's GLEN.L decision last
month to suspend production at Katanga Mining unit for 18
months. urn:newsml:reuters.com:*:nL8N12F2IL