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Overview

China Guangfa Bank provides a $300 million USD loan to Karara Mining Limited for working capital purposes (Linked to Record ID#97025 and #97027)

Commitments (Constant USD, 2023)$301,888,888
Commitment Year2018Country of ActivityAustraliaDirect Recipient Country of IncorporationAustraliaSectorIndustry, Mining, ConstructionFlow TypeLoan

Status

Project lifecycle

Pipeline: Commitment

Pipeline: PledgePipeline: CommitmentImplementationCompletion

Timeline

Key dates

Commitment date
Mar 28, 2018
Last repayment (originally scheduled)
Mar 28, 2019

Stakeholders

Organizations involved in projects and activities supported by financial and in-kind transfers from Chinese government and state-owned entities

Ultimate beneficial owners

At least 25% host country ownershipAt least 25% Chinese ownership

Funding agencies

State-owned Commercial Banks

  • China Guangfa Bank (CGB)

Receiving agencies

Joint Venture/Special Purpose Vehicles

  • Karara Mining Limited (KML)

Loan description

China Guangfa Bank provides a $300 million USD loan to Karara Mining Limited for working capital purposes

Interest rate (t₀)6.5%Interest typeFixed Interest RateMaturity1 years

Narrative

Full Description

Project narrative

In or around March 2015, China Guangfa Bank (CGB) entered into a $300 million USD bilateral term loan facility with Karara Mining Limited (KML or 卡拉拉矿业公司 or 卡拉拉矿业有限公司) — a special purpose vehicle (SPV) and joint venture of Australian mining company Gindalbie Metals Limited (47.84% equity stake) and Angang Group Investment (Australia) Pty Ltd (a wholly owned subsidiary of Chinese state-owned steel-maker and iron ore miner Anshan Iron & Steel Group Corporation (Ansteel)) (52.16% equity stake) — for unspecified purposes. This loan carried a maturity period of three years and a maturity date in April 2018. Record ID#97025 captures the 2015 loan. On March 28, 2018, CGB entered into a new $300 million USD (RMB 1,987,500,000) Foreign Currency Loan Contract with KML for working capital purposes. This loan carried a maturity period of 12 months (one year) from the date of first utilization, anticipated on or around March 27, 2018 (a final maturity date of on or around March 27, 2019), a fixed interest rate of 6.5%, and had repayments scheduled quarterly. If required, Gindalbie would issued a limited recourse guarantee to Ansteel, limited to Gindalbie's shareholding in KML for this loan. Record ID#97026 captures the 2018 loan. On or around April 7, 2019, CGB entered into an agreement with KML to extend the maturity period of this loan by 12 months (to two years), with the new maturity date falling on April 7, 2020. Record ID#97027 captures this extension. The Karara Iron Ore Project (KIOP) involved the construction and operation of a magnetite mining and processing operation located in the Mid-West region of Western Australia, located approximately 225 kilometers east-southeast of Geraldton and 320 kilometers north-northeast of Perth. It consisted of an open cut mining pit, a beneficiation processing plant, a waste rock dump (WRD), tailings storage facilities (TSF), rail loading facilities, accommodation facilities, an airstrip, and a Linear Infrastructure Corridor (LIC) containing a water pipeline and access road. Stage 1 of KIOP sought was to be construct infrastructure to produce 3 million tons per annum of hematite and 8 millions tons per annum of magnetite concentrate, to be sold by Ansteel for its 6.5 million tons per annum Bayuquan steel mill in China. The Karara mine contained approximately 1.4 billion metric tons of recoverable reserves and over two billion tons of estimated reserves, with an estimated 60-year lifespan at an initial production rate of 8 million tons per annum. In addition to the mine, the KIOP consisted of the following supporting infrastructure: a 80-kilometer Karara rail spur, connecting KIOP to the common-user rail system at Tilley Siding, near Morawa; a 180-kilometer long 330 kV powerline from Eneabba to Karara, connecting the project site to Western Australia's South West power grid; a 145-kilometer water pipeline, supplying process water from a bore field near Mingenew to Karara; and the Karara Export Terminal (KET) at the Port of Geraldton, with a capacity of 16 million tons per annum of magnetite concentrate or hematite direct shipping, consisting of a dedicated fourth railway line inside the port, a twin-car rotary dumper (train unloader), a 297-meter long storage facility with a 255,000 tons capacity, a dedicated berth, Berth 7, capable of accommodating Panamax vessels; and a 5,000 ton-per-hour ship-loader. The ground-breaking ceremony and the start of construction began on November 2009. The Karara Export Terminal officially opened on September 18, 2012. The project first produced magnetite concentrate in November 2012. The project was officially opened in April 2013. The project first produced 68% Fe concentrate were later in August 2013.

Staff comments

1. In March 2014, Ansteel converted two shareholder loans into shares in KML, leading to a new breakdown in the ownership of KML as follows: Gindalbie (47.84% equity stake) and Ansteel (52.16% equity stake) (see pg.6 of "Gindalbie Metals Limited Annual Report 2014"). Then, in 2019, Ansteel Group acquired Gindalbie Metals Limited for $39 million. It thereby gained a 100% ownership stake in KML (see "Norton Rose Fulbright advises Ansteel Group on $39m acquisition of Gindalbie Metals Limited"). 2. Angang Group Hong Kong (Holdings) Limited, a subsidiary of Ansteel, was one of the substantial shareholders of Gindalbie Metals Limited, holding a 35.887% stake by June 30, 2012 (see pg.24 of "Gindalbie Metals Limited Annual Report 2012").