Epiroc secures order for drill rigs in Mauritania

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Epiroc secures order for drill rigs in Mauritania

Epiroc has secured order to supply drill rigs to Mauritania, one of Africa’s largest iron ore producers. The worth US $14.7miliion order calls  for a package of the company’s advanced Pit Viper 351 drill rigs fitted with AutoDrill and AutoLevel functionality to be put to work in the F’Derick mining site – known to contain some 30 million tons of high-quality iron ore.

The Swedish mining and infrastructure manufacturer will also supply includes service supervision and spare parts to ensure the ongoing operation and maintenance of the rigs, cementing Epiroc and SNIM’s long-standing West African relationships and the former’s paramount standing as a mining equipment provisioner in the region.

Epiroc’s success has been founded on this forward-facing responsible business approach- seeing it expand its operations with the establishment of new local chapters in the Ivory Coast, Sierra Leone and Senegal, achieving 20% workforce growth this year alone.

Customer-centric approach

The company is pushing for gender equality from a 50% female talent pool and adopting a customer-centric approach with its local repositioning direction, having priorly consisted of three entities: Epiroc Mali covering Mali, Mauritania, Guinea, Senegal and the Ivory Coast, Epiroc Burkina Faso encompassing Burkina Faso, Niger, the Central African Republic, the Republic of the Congo and Gabon, and Epiroc Ghana taking in Ghana, Nigeria, Liberia and Sierra Leone.

Epiroc is leading the charge on a sustainability front, pushing for all equipment to employ a zero-emission battery-powered approach by 2025 for underground mining and 2030 for surface operations, whilst supporting an employee-led “Water for All” initiative these past 30 years, providing essential relief to water scarce areas worldwide- of which Mauritania, the Sahel and MSGBC basin are top targets.

This September, Mauritania and its neighbors will gather for the MSGBC Oil, Gas & Power Conference 2022– addressing not only the tremendous potential of the basin’s burgeoning energy industry but the intersectionality of this power boon- mining as a chief driver of demand and therefore primary beneficiary.

In Guinea-Bissau and Conakry, bauxite is a crucial GDP component- however this raw ore of aluminum increases its value sixfold if sufficient energy resources are present for in situ refining prior to export. Likewise, across Mauritania, Senegal and The Gambia, regionally significant reserves of gold, diamonds and iron ore are held in deposits only now being tapped, this high potential domestic industry set to follow in energy’s steps as a key economic driver. In 2020, Mauritania spent $1.65 million on iron ore imports, largely from Turkey.

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