PolyMet receives $14 million in capital from Glencore

The new capital will help the mining company for the next several months.

June 17, 2016 at 1:19AM
FILE - This April 14, 2011 file picture shows the Glencore headquarters in Baar, Switzerland. Commodities trader Glencore says Chinese regulators have approved its proposed merger with mining company Xstrata PLC. The Swiss-based supplier of raw materials such as oil, copper and wheat says the merger was cleared by China's Ministry of Commerce subject to certain conditions. Among those, says Glencore, which also owns plants, warehouses and mines, is that the company must sell all of its post-merg
Glencore, the Swiss mining company, provided another $14 million to St. Paul-based PolyMet. (Evan Ramstad — AP/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

PolyMet Mining Corp., the St. Paul company planning a copper-nickel mine in northern Minnesota, earlier this month received a new infusion of capital from global mining giant Glencore PLC.

Glencore, which has financially supported PolyMet since 2008 chiefly through debt purchases, on June 2 paid $14 million for a new round of secured debentures. PolyMet uses the money for its general operating expenses.

Glencore provided PolyMet with $33 million via debt purchases last year. PolyMet's monthly spending, or burn rate, has typically been in the $2 million to $3 million range. The company's spending on the environmental review of its mine proposal has fallen as that process nears an end. Its spending on permitting is rising, a spokesman said.

The Minnesota Department of Natural Resources in March issued a 3,500-page environmental impact statement for the proposed mine near Hoyt Lakes, setting the stage for the permitting process to begin. A 30-day comment period passed without any legal challenges to the DNR impact statement.

Gov. Mark Dayton at the time said the "real decisionmaking process begins now" for the prospective mine, which is expected to employ around 350 people. Dayton has not decided whether to support it.

PolyMet plans to spend $650 million to build the open-pit mine, which would be Minnesota's first for copper, nickel and other precious metals. Mining in the state's Iron Range typically produces taconite, used in making steel.

Federal reviews and court challenges are still underway, and the company and state are discussing long-term financial protections that PolyMet must develop to cover the costs if an environmental disaster were to occur.

In its latest financial report, issued Wednesday for the three months ended April 30, PolyMet reported a loss of $2.35 million compared to a loss of $3.6 million in the same period a year ago.

Through April 30, the company had spent about $108 million on the environmental review and permitting process, which began a decade ago.

Evan Ramstad • 612-673-4241

about the writer

about the writer

Evan Ramstad

Columnist

Evan Ramstad is a Star Tribune business columnist.

See More

More from Business

card image

Pioneering surgeon has run afoul of Fairview Health Services, though, which suspended his hospital privileges amid an investigation of his patient care.

card image