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SMB-Winning aims to bring Guinea's Simandou iron ore to market in 2025

China-backed consortium SMB-Winning aims to bring blocks 1 and 2 of Guinea's massive Simandou iron ore deposit into production by 2025, Chairman Fadi Wazni said last Friday, a tight timetable for a huge mine and infrastructure project.

The consortium - which includes Societe Miniere de Boke (SMB) and Singapore's Winning Shipping as well as Guinean government interests - won a $14 billion government tender in November 2019 to develop the blocks of the largest known deposit of its kind, holding more than 2 billion tonnes of high-grade ore.

"2025 is what we are aiming to," Wazni said. "I have to say that, if you look at our record with bauxite... we are fairly confident we will meet this target." SMB, a company founded in 2014, has rapidly risen to become Guinea's biggest bauxite exporter.

Blocks 3 and 4 of Simandou are owned by Rio Tinto.

Guinea's government is requiring the developers of Simandou to build a 650 km (400 mile) railway, dubbed the Transguineen, and a deepwater port to transport the ore from the remote southeastern corner of Guinea to the coast for export.

"We already have in hand the technical capability to undertake the construction of the Transguineen railway," Wazni said, adding that SMB-Winning has had contact with Rio Tinto about potentially transporting their ore on the railway. "The more we have tonnes, the happier we are," he said, adding that the infrastructure would be too costly if there is not enough cargo shipped out on it.