Quick Facts
| Location | Copperbelt Province; -12.82°S, 28.19°E |
| Ownership | EMR Capital (Australia); previously Vale/African Rainbow Minerals JV |
| Production | ~20,000-25,000 tpa copper cathode equivalent |
| Workforce | ~2,500 |
| Primary Minerals | Copper |
| Corridor Connection | Copperbelt Province; near Chililabombwe; potential corridor beneficiary |
| Operator Website | www.emrcapital.com |
Overview
The Lubambe Copper Mine is an underground operation in Zambia's Copperbelt Province, approximately 12 kilometres south of Chililabombwe. The mine was originally developed as a joint venture between Brazilian mining giant Vale and South Africa's African Rainbow Minerals (ARM) before being acquired by Australian private equity firm EMR Capital.
Lubambe accesses a stratabound copper deposit at approximately 1,200 metres depth using a mechanised room-and-pillar mining method. The mine produces copper concentrates processed through a conventional flotation plant. Annual production has typically ranged between 20,000 and 25,000 tonnes of copper.
The mine's significance in the corridor context relates to its location in the Zambian Copperbelt and its contribution to the aggregate copper production that would benefit from improved export logistics through the Lobito Corridor. While individually a mid-scale operation, Lubambe represents the type of established copper mine that generates consistent demand for transport infrastructure.
Community Impact
Lubambe is a significant employer in the Chililabombwe area. The mine has invested in community development projects including education and healthcare infrastructure. As a mechanised underground operation, it provides relatively skilled employment compared to open-pit alternatives.
Environmental Profile
Underground mining at Lubambe generates lower surface disturbance than open-pit operations but requires management of underground water, mine ventilation, and concentrate transport. The conventional flotation plant produces tailings requiring proper containment and water recycling.
ESG Assessment
Status: Under Assessment
This mine has not yet received a formal Lobito Corridor ESG rating. Our assessment team is compiling baseline data from public sources, field observations, and stakeholder consultations. ESG ratings, when issued, will be verified through the source library.
Timeline
| Date | Event |
|---|---|
| 2012 | Mine development completed by Vale/ARM joint venture |
| 2013 | Commercial production commences |
| 2018 | EMR Capital acquires mine from Vale and ARM |
| 2020+ | Ongoing production under EMR Capital ownership |
Related Pages
Minerals: Copper
Community: Chingola (nearby)
Related Mines: Konkola KCM · Mopani
Country: Zambia Profile
Index: All Mine Profiles · ESG Observatory
This profile is produced independently by Lobito Corridor and does not represent the views of EMR Capital or any government. Data sourced from public filings, government reports, and independent research. Last updated: May 19, 2026.
Independent ESG Assessment
Our independent ESG assessment evaluates this operation's environmental management, social impact, governance quality, and disclosure transparency. Environmental assessment covers water management, waste handling, air emissions, biodiversity impacts, and mine closure planning. Social assessment examines community relations, employment practices, local procurement, benefit-sharing, and human rights performance. Governance assessment evaluates corporate transparency, anti-corruption measures, and stakeholder engagement quality.
Assessment findings are incorporated into our quarterly Corridor ESG Scorecards, providing stakeholders with comparable, independent ratings across all major corridor mining operations. Operations meeting our assessment thresholds are eligible for verified ESG ratings issued from our evidence archive — verifiable reputation signals that differentiate responsible operators from those whose ESG claims are unsubstantiated. Rating publication requires demonstrated performance, not just policy commitments.
Community Impact Monitoring
Community impact monitoring around this operation tracks the full spectrum of mining effects on surrounding populations. Employment and procurement spending quantify direct economic benefits to local communities. Environmental monitoring tracks water quality, air quality, and ecosystem health in areas affected by operations. Community consultation processes are evaluated for meaningful participation versus performative compliance. Grievance mechanisms are assessed for accessibility, responsiveness, and outcome fairness.
Our monitoring provides the independent verification that enables stakeholders — investors, regulators, civil society, and affected communities themselves — to assess whether this operation delivers the community benefits that its social licence to operate requires. Documentation is preserved on our source evidence archive, creating permanent records that support long-term accountability and prevent the revisionism that undermines community claims when corporate memory proves conveniently selective.
Labour Practices Assessment
Labour practices at this operation are assessed against both national labour law requirements and international standards including ILO conventions and the Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights. Our assessment covers wage levels and payment practices, working hours and overtime compensation, occupational health and safety conditions, freedom of association and collective bargaining, contract terms and employment security, and subcontractor labour standards. Subcontractor labour conditions receive particular attention as subcontracting relationships can create distance between the operating company and workers that enables standards erosion.
Our assessment includes worker consultation that captures perspectives not reflected in corporate compliance reporting. Workers face barriers to reporting concerns through company channels including fear of retaliation, distrust of management-controlled grievance mechanisms, and language barriers. Our independent worker consultation provides confidential channels through which labour concerns can be documented and, where appropriate, escalated through advocacy or referral to labour rights organisations. All worker consultation documentation is handled with strict confidentiality to protect worker anonymity and prevent retaliation.
Supply Chain and Market Position
This mine's position within global mineral supply chains determines the economic dynamics that shape its operational decisions and community impact. Copper and cobalt prices, processing locations, end-user industries, and supply-demand dynamics create the commercial context within which environmental and social management decisions are made. When commodity prices are high, operators may invest more in community development and environmental management; when prices fall, these investments face pressure. Our monitoring tracks the relationship between market conditions and ESG performance to assess whether responsible practices are maintained through market cycles or only during profitable periods.
The corridor's logistics infrastructure — railway capacity, port throughput, transport costs — directly affects this mine's export economics. Improved corridor logistics reduce transport costs, improving mine profitability and potentially creating space for increased community benefit-sharing. Conversely, logistics bottlenecks increase costs and reduce the economic surplus available for community investment. Our strategic analysis evaluates how corridor infrastructure development affects this mine's economics and, consequently, the resources available for community benefit and environmental management.
Mine closure planning assessment evaluates this operation's preparation for eventual cessation of mining activity. Mines are finite — mineral deposits are exhausted over decades. Communities that become economically dependent on mining employment face devastating consequences when mines close unless closure is planned with community transition in mind. Our assessment evaluates closure provisions including financial guarantees, environmental rehabilitation plans, community transition programmes, and post-mining land use planning. Adequate closure planning is a governance indicator that distinguishes responsible long-term operators from those extracting value without provision for the communities left behind.
Water stewardship analysis is critical for mining operations that consume significant water resources and generate water-quality risks through acid mine drainage, tailings seepage, and processing effluent. Our assessment evaluates water sourcing sustainability, water treatment effectiveness, discharge quality monitoring, and downstream community water access. In water-stressed corridor regions, mining water use competes with community agricultural and domestic needs. Our monitoring ensures that this competition is documented and that water allocation decisions reflect community rights alongside commercial requirements.