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Chile's August Slump After A Mine Tragedy-And What It Reveals
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) On July 31, a rockfall inside El Teniente-the world's largest underground copper mine-killed six workers and injured nine. Operations paused under tighter safety checks.
In August, the ripple effects showed up across Chile's economy: the IMACEC activity index fell 0.7% from July (seasonally adjusted) and rose 0.5% year on year. Mining was the main drag; services also slipped, while commerce barely grew.
That is the headline. The story behind it is about how a single shock at one mine can move a nation built on copper. El Teniente is a pillar of Codelco, Chile 's state miner and a symbol of the country's modern economy.
When its tunnels go quiet, contractors, truckers, repair shops, and service providers feel it. Authorities declared national mourning; regulators staged a cautious reopening with high-risk areas still closed through late August.
Codelco cut its 2025 output guidance and warned of higher costs as damaged sections are repaired. Policy makers are threading a needle. The central bank trimmed its benchmark rate to 4.75% in late July, then held it in September, saying inflation risks cannot be ignored.
Its September outlook sees GDP growth of 2.25%–2.75% in 2025 and 1.75%–2.75% in 2026-modest numbers that assume mining normalizes and domestic demand steadies after earlier wage gains.
Why this matters beyond Chile: copper is the metal of the energy transition-power grids, wind farms, and electric vehicles all need it.
A temporary hit at a flagship Chilean mine tightens supply, influences prices, and complicates investment plans from smelters in Asia to cable makers in Europe.
It also spotlights a deeper issue: many of Chile's biggest deposits are old, deeper, and costlier to operate. Keeping them safe and productive requires constant spending and patience.
The months ahead will turn on two questions. How fast can El Teniente return to full, safer output? And can domestic demand offset mining's fits and starts while inflation stays contained? For Chile-and for anyone who depends on copper-the answers will be felt far beyond a single mountainside.
In August, the ripple effects showed up across Chile's economy: the IMACEC activity index fell 0.7% from July (seasonally adjusted) and rose 0.5% year on year. Mining was the main drag; services also slipped, while commerce barely grew.
That is the headline. The story behind it is about how a single shock at one mine can move a nation built on copper. El Teniente is a pillar of Codelco, Chile 's state miner and a symbol of the country's modern economy.
When its tunnels go quiet, contractors, truckers, repair shops, and service providers feel it. Authorities declared national mourning; regulators staged a cautious reopening with high-risk areas still closed through late August.
Codelco cut its 2025 output guidance and warned of higher costs as damaged sections are repaired. Policy makers are threading a needle. The central bank trimmed its benchmark rate to 4.75% in late July, then held it in September, saying inflation risks cannot be ignored.
Its September outlook sees GDP growth of 2.25%–2.75% in 2025 and 1.75%–2.75% in 2026-modest numbers that assume mining normalizes and domestic demand steadies after earlier wage gains.
Why this matters beyond Chile: copper is the metal of the energy transition-power grids, wind farms, and electric vehicles all need it.
A temporary hit at a flagship Chilean mine tightens supply, influences prices, and complicates investment plans from smelters in Asia to cable makers in Europe.
It also spotlights a deeper issue: many of Chile's biggest deposits are old, deeper, and costlier to operate. Keeping them safe and productive requires constant spending and patience.
The months ahead will turn on two questions. How fast can El Teniente return to full, safer output? And can domestic demand offset mining's fits and starts while inflation stays contained? For Chile-and for anyone who depends on copper-the answers will be felt far beyond a single mountainside.

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