LONDON (Reuters) - Copper prices at $7,000 a tonne may not be sustainable and a price closer to $5,000 would be better for the market, Zambia's Central Bank Governor said on Thursday."I'm not sure the high Copper price is a good thing," Caleb Fundanga said at a Zambia investment forum in London.Three-month copper on the London Metal Exchange was trading at $7,110 a tonne on Thursday."We are questioning if $7,000 is a sustainable price for copper but $5,000 is a good price," Fundanga added. Copper mining is Zambia's economic mainstay and copper and cobalt producers are a major employer in the southern African country.
Contact
info@platformzambia.nl
Secretariaat Werkgroep Zambia
+31 (0)35 53 81 951
Info
Deze website is ingedeeld in de secties ‘Artikelen en informatie, Particuliere Initiatieven en Achtergronden’ en een sectie ‘Nederlandse Ontwikkelingsinitiatieven in Zambia’. Daarnaast is er ruimte voor informatie over de activiteiten van de ‘Stichting Werkgroep Zambia’ die deze website platformzambia.nl beheert.