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Chile's New Mining Rush And Why It Matters Far Beyond The Andes
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) If you drive an electric car or use a smartphone, part of your life already depends on Chile. The country is the world's top copper producer and a key supplier of lithium and other“transition minerals” that power batteries, data centers and modern grids.
Now, a new mining wave is forming – and how Chile handles it will ripple through global supply chains. On paper, the numbers are impressive.
There are 51 mining projects currently going through Chile's environmental approval system, representing about $10.7 billion in planned investment.
Roughly 88% of that is concentrated in the northern mining heartlands of Antofagasta, Atacama and Coquimbo, driven by heavyweights such as Codelco, Antofagasta Minerals and BHP with projects above $1 billion.
Below that top tier, a new generation of mines is lining up. Pucobre 's Tovaku open-pit copper project carries an $870 million price tag. Simco Lithium's Sales de Maricunga aims to produce lithium hydroxide with around $350 million in investment.
The Ciclón Exploradora polymetallic project and Aclara Resources' Módulo Penco, planned as Chile's first rare-earth operation, signal an effort to diversify beyond classic copper.
Approvals have also accelerated. Since the current administration took office, authorities have cleared 115 mining projects worth about $21.2 billion.
In 2025 alone, 42 mining initiatives have been approved – more than double 2024 – and across all sectors, 305 projects totaling $34.3 billion have received environmental clearance, a record since 1993, with about one-third of that tied to mining.
Chile's mining boom meets politics, permits and protest
The story behind those figures is a long fight over bureaucracy and ideology. For years, companies complained that“permisología” – slow, politicized permitting – was scaring off capital.
The government now points to streamlined procedures and a pro-growth cabinet that tracks strategic projects, while critics warn about regulatory zigzags, new taxes and experiments in state control that could chill investment.
At the same time, local communities and activists fear water depletion in high-altitude salt flats, pollution near coastal cities and the legacy of older mines.
Court battles and social-media campaigns around projects like Dominga and new lithium ventures show that opposition is organized and loud.
For investors and observers, Chile has become a test case: can a resource-rich democracy expand mining fast enough to feed the green transition, while keeping rules stable, communities heard and ideology in check? The answer will help decide how affordable and secure the world's clean-energy future really is.
Now, a new mining wave is forming – and how Chile handles it will ripple through global supply chains. On paper, the numbers are impressive.
There are 51 mining projects currently going through Chile's environmental approval system, representing about $10.7 billion in planned investment.
Roughly 88% of that is concentrated in the northern mining heartlands of Antofagasta, Atacama and Coquimbo, driven by heavyweights such as Codelco, Antofagasta Minerals and BHP with projects above $1 billion.
Below that top tier, a new generation of mines is lining up. Pucobre 's Tovaku open-pit copper project carries an $870 million price tag. Simco Lithium's Sales de Maricunga aims to produce lithium hydroxide with around $350 million in investment.
The Ciclón Exploradora polymetallic project and Aclara Resources' Módulo Penco, planned as Chile's first rare-earth operation, signal an effort to diversify beyond classic copper.
Approvals have also accelerated. Since the current administration took office, authorities have cleared 115 mining projects worth about $21.2 billion.
In 2025 alone, 42 mining initiatives have been approved – more than double 2024 – and across all sectors, 305 projects totaling $34.3 billion have received environmental clearance, a record since 1993, with about one-third of that tied to mining.
Chile's mining boom meets politics, permits and protest
The story behind those figures is a long fight over bureaucracy and ideology. For years, companies complained that“permisología” – slow, politicized permitting – was scaring off capital.
The government now points to streamlined procedures and a pro-growth cabinet that tracks strategic projects, while critics warn about regulatory zigzags, new taxes and experiments in state control that could chill investment.
At the same time, local communities and activists fear water depletion in high-altitude salt flats, pollution near coastal cities and the legacy of older mines.
Court battles and social-media campaigns around projects like Dominga and new lithium ventures show that opposition is organized and loud.
For investors and observers, Chile has become a test case: can a resource-rich democracy expand mining fast enough to feed the green transition, while keeping rules stable, communities heard and ideology in check? The answer will help decide how affordable and secure the world's clean-energy future really is.
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