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Cuba's unrefined nickel plus cobalt production appears to have been between 60 000 t and 65 000 t this year, the lowest in a decade, according to radio news during this week.

Cuba produced 70 400 t of unrefined nickel and cobalt in 2008, after averaging between 74 000 t and 75 000 t during much of the decade.

While production at Canadian mining company Sherritt International's nickel venture in Cuba topped 37 000 t, output at two plants owned by state-run Cubaniquel was well below capacity.

Cuba has not announced this year's nickel output, with officials simply stating it was less than the 70,000 tonnes planned.

The Caribbean island is one of the world's largest nickel producers and supplies 10% of the world's cobalt, according to the Basic Industry Ministry.

"The Pedro Soto Alba plant met this year's plan, producing more than 37,000 tonnes of nickel, and remains open," Jorge Cuevas Ramos, the first secretary of the Communist Party in Holguin, was quoted by national state-run Radio Rebelde on Wednesday as stating.

Radio stations based in Holguin, where the three plants are located, reported this week that production at the Cuba-owned Ernesto Che Guevara plant, with a capacity of 32 000 t, did not meet it's 26 000-t plan.

There was no mention of output at the country's third and oldest plant, the Rene Ramos Latourt at Nicaro Holguin, which has a capacity of 10 000 to 15 000 t and is also operated by Cubaniquel.

Scattered reports this year indicated Rene Ramos Latourt and the feed process to the plant were operating below capacity at various times, so there were most likely production problems there as well.

Hurricane Ike, a Category 3 storm, hit Cuba in September 2008 at Holguin's northern coast, where the nickel industry's three processing plants are located, damaging the two Cubaniquel plants, infrastructure, housing and buildings and swamping the area with torrential rains and a storm surge.

Nickel is essential in the production of stainless steel and other corrosion-resistant alloys. Cobalt is critical in production of super alloys used for such products as aircraft engines.

Cuban nickel is considered to be Class II, with an average 90 percent nickel content.

Cuba's National Minerals Resource Centre reported that eastern Holguin province accounted for more than 30 percent of the world's known nickel reserves, with lesser reserves in other parts of the country.

Source: www.miningweekly.com and Reuters

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