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Wanbao Mining

Wanbao Mining Ltd.
Industry Mining, smelting and processing
Founded 2005
Headquarters Beijing
Key people
Chen Defang (President)
Products Copper
Parent Subsidiary of China North Industries Corporation
Website www.wbmining.com

Wanbao Mining is a Chinese mining company engaged in exploration and production of mineral resources as well as the processing and smelting of mineral ores. The geographically diverse company operates in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, and Myanmar.

The company is active in Myanmar, most notably developing a copper mine at the base of the Letpadaung mountain. Land acquisition has been a contentious matter in the expansion of the mine with protests by villagers following a proposed buyout of land encompassing 26 villages. Wanbao made an initial offer of $600 per acre in addition to relocation to new housing, a proposal that was accepted by many in the villages but refused by holdouts who saw the compensation as inadequate for the low price and loss of livelihood. There were intermittent protests by hundreds of villagers against the project starting in the summer of 2012 with tense police confrontations leading to the arrest of dozens of protesters. These village protests were effective in bringing a stop to development of the mine in November of the same year.

After the halt of mine construction, the company shifted tactics and worked with Aung San Suu Kyi, the celebrated leader of the National League for Democracy and opposition politician, to win local support for the mine. This shift from having previously negotiated with the military leadership for support of the mine to community based public relations was the focus of a Wall Street Journal article which included an interview with the company president Chen Defang. The image building campaign documented by the Journal quoted Chen Defang as humbled by admitting error in previously ignoring community opinion and described a multi-day tour by Chen Defang with Aung San Suu Kyi to discuss with affected villagers concerns over the project. The company president made pledges about building a library and other civic infrastructure, creating local jobs, supporting local small businesses and raising the amount of compensation for land from $600 per acre to $700–1200 per acre, depending on the use of the land. In March 2013, the project gained crucial support when a panel led by Aung San Suu Kyi recommended mining construction resume due to the importance of the mine to the economy.


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