Hormuz Market Case
Copper Mining, Concentration and Smelting in Kerman Province
Kerman is Iran’s core copper-mining and processing province, centred on the Sarcheshmeh complex, Meiduk and a pipeline of NICICO projects. USGS reports Sarcheshmeh produced 738,665 tonnes of copper concentrate in 2023 and locates Sarcheshmeh mining,…
Case in brief
Kerman is Iran’s core copper-mining and processing province, centred on the Sarcheshmeh complex, Meiduk and a pipeline of NICICO projects. USGS reports Sarcheshmeh produced 738,665 tonnes of copper concentrate in 2023 and locates Sarcheshmeh mining, smelting, refining and electrowinning capacity in Kerman. Seridoon, also in Kerman, was under construction with a stated 550,000-tonne annual concentrate capacity and a 2027 target. The investment case benefits from an upstream resource base and stronger long-term copper-demand fundamentals than steel. However, it remains constrained by aridity, tailings stewardship, power, project-delivery uncertainty, state-linked counterparties, and the same severe sanctions and payment barriers.[1, 2, 3, 4, 7]
Research scope: The evidence is concentrated in NICICO’s Sarcheshmeh and Meiduk assets and the Seridoon development, not all non-ferrous metals in Kerman Province.
Investment frame
How this market case works
Market structure
Kerman’s copper intersection is a vertically linked mining-to-metal cluster dominated by National Iranian Copper Industries Company (NICICO). Sarcheshmeh is the principal complex: USGS records 730,000 tonnes per year of concentrate capacity, 200,000 tonnes per year of smelter capacity, 210,000 tonnes per year of refinery capacity and 14,000 tonnes per year of electrowinning capacity. Meiduk adds mine and electrowinning activity within Kerman. The cluster also carries molybdenum exposure and a development pipeline at Seridoon and Sarcheshmeh. This structure favours mine services, recovery improvement, water and tailings technology, and selective processing upgrades over independent greenfield entry.
Investor access
A general foreign investor should treat direct mine ownership or financing of core copper assets as high-complexity and potentially unavailable without extensive approvals. USGS says large-capacity mineral companies are largely government-controlled through IMIDRO; NICICO is identified as an IMIDRO-linked operator. U.S. rules also cover Iran’s copper sector and certain significant transactions involving equipment, services, trade, transport and financial facilitation. The most plausible routes are a compliant technology licence, specialist engineering or environmental-service agreement, local manufacturing or service JV, or minority participation only after ownership, permits, offtake, payment, insurance and sanctions pathways are independently cleared. Asset-level environmental and reserve diligence is essential.
Investment signals
Strengths and constraints
Strengths
- Verified fact
Kerman contains a vertically integrated copper base: USGS lists NICICO concentrate, smelting, refining and electrowinning facilities at Sarcheshmeh, plus Meiduk mining and electrowinning operations in the province.[1]
- Verified fact
Sarcheshmeh produced 738,665 tonnes of copper concentrate in 2023, the largest reported contribution among Iran’s named copper complexes in the USGS review.[1]
- Verified fact
Seridoon provides a second Kerman development node: construction started in March 2023 for a stated 550,000-tonne-per-year concentrate project.[1]
- Analytical inference
Copper’s medium-term demand outlook is structurally more favourable than a purely domestic construction-led steel thesis, because electrification and grids are major drivers and the IEA sees a potential 2035 supply shortfall.[4]
Constraints
- Verified fact
Southeastern Iran is arid and water scarcity has historically required water preservation and recycling to be central to Sarcheshmeh expansion planning.[3]
- Verified fact
Tailings and water management are material technical and environmental risks at the Sarcheshmeh–Meiduk copper cluster.[3]
- Verified fact
Sarcheshmeh Phases 3 and 4 and the Seridoon project were reported with future capacity and completion expectations, but the sources reviewed do not verify present commissioning status.[1]
- Verified fact
E.O. 13871 authorizes sanctions relating to Iran’s copper sector, creating material counterparty, equipment, finance, logistics and offtake constraints.[2]
Opportunity hypotheses
Where a viable entry thesis may exist
Tailings dewatering and water-recovery retrofit
Deploy thickening, filtration, water-recovery controls and monitoring to increase water circularity and reduce tailings-management pressure at established Kerman copper operations.[1, 3]
- Demand trigger
- Aridity, planned production expansion and demonstrated historical need for recovery and reuse at Sarcheshmeh.
- Likely buyer
- NICICO complexes, EPC contractors and mine-service operators.
- Entry route
- Specialist process-technology licence, engineering contract or local service JV.
- Key uncertainty
- Tailings characteristics, access to site data, import permissibility, performance guarantees and project finance.
Copper recovery and slag-flotation services
Supply process optimisation, flotation reagents, instrumentation and recovery services where copper-bearing slag and complex ores justify incremental recovery.[1, 2]
- Demand trigger
- A Sarcheshmeh slag-flotation expansion was intended to add 80,000 t/yr of concentrate capacity.
- Likely buyer
- NICICO and qualified metallurgical contractors.
- Entry route
- Technology and reagent supply coupled with local technical service and performance testing.
- Key uncertainty
- Whether the reported project has been completed, actual feed grades, recoveries and sanctions treatment of inputs.
Mine equipment, wear-parts and reliability JV
Localise high-turnover mine and concentrator consumables with field service, condition monitoring and inventory management.[1, 2]
- Demand trigger
- Large operating concentrate capacity at Sarcheshmeh and Meiduk plus a multi-project development pipeline.
- Likely buyer
- NICICO sites, mining contractors and local equipment distributors.
- Entry route
- Local assembly, authorised service JV or stocked-parts distribution agreement.
- Key uncertainty
- Technology transfer restrictions, payment security and price competitiveness against established suppliers.
Molybdenum and copper by-product characterisation
Provide assay, metallurgical testing and process optimisation for by-product value capture associated with Sarcheshmeh expansions.[1, 2]
- Demand trigger
- Sarcheshmeh Phases 3 and 4 were reported to include 6,115 t/yr of molybdenum concentrate capacity.
- Likely buyer
- NICICO, project EPC teams and downstream traders where permitted.
- Entry route
- Laboratory partnership, process-engineering agreement or modular testing facility.
- Key uncertainty
- Project status, mineralogical data, offtake options and trade restrictions.
Companies connected to this market case
Relevant companies
- dominant provincial copper operator
National Iranian Copper Industries Company
USGS identifies NICICO as operator of Sarcheshmeh and Meiduk facilities in Kerman and describes it as IMIDRO-linked.[1]
Open Hormuz profile - provincial refining participant
Middle East Mines and Mining Industries Development Holding Company
USGS lists its refinery around 20 km north of Shahr-e Babak, Kerman Province, with 50,000 tonnes per year capacity.[1]
Open Hormuz profile - Company connected to both selected entities
Shahid Rajaee Copper Company
Shahid Rajaee Copper Company requires additional verification because public sources did not clearly confirm a current official website, ticker, or exact operating company under this English name. In the Hormuz Group company graph, it should be treated as a provisional Kerman copper-sector entry connected to non-ferrous materials, industrial copper demand, a[8]
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Kavir Copper Company
Kavir Copper Company requires additional verification because public sources did not clearly confirm a current official website, ticker, or exact operating entity under this English name. In the Hormuz Group company graph, it should be treated as a provisional Kerman copper-sector entry connected to copper materials, regional mining activity, downstream manu[9]
Open Hormuz profile - Company connected to both selected entities
Shahid Bahonar Copper Industries Company
Shahid Bahonar Copper Industries Company is a listed copper-processing manufacturer located near Kerman, close to Iran's major copper mining region. In the Hormuz Group company graph, it matters because it transforms copper cathode and alloy inputs into semi-finished products used by electrical, industrial, construction, automotive, and infrastructure sector[10]
Open Hormuz profile - Company connected to both selected entities
Babak Copper Company
Iranian Babak Copper Company is a private copper producer and processor associated with MIDHCO's mining-industrial platform in Shahr-e Babak, Kerman Province. In the Hormuz Group company graph, it matters because it links copper mining, concentrate processing, cathode production, tube manufacturing, and downstream industrial-material supply. Its location nea[11]
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Assets and infrastructure shaping execution
Relevant infrastructure
- core mine-to-refined-metal complex
Sarcheshmeh Copper Mine
USGS records concentrate output of 738,665 tonnes in 2023 and documents concentrate, smelting, refining and electrowinning capacity in Kerman.[1]
Open Hormuz profile - Related Hormuz infrastructure
Sirjan Rail and Logistics Hub
Sirjan Rail and Logistics Hub matters in the Hormuz Graph because Sirjan sits at the intersection of Kerman’s mining and industrial base, Gol Gohar-linked materials flows, road corridors, and rail movement toward Bandar Abbas and central Iran. Its role connects iron ore, steel-related inputs, industrial freight, warehousing, road-rail transfer, and export-fa
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Kerman International Airport
Kerman International Airport matters in the Hormuz Graph as the main air-access layer for one of Iran’s largest mining, metals, and southeast-corridor provinces. Its role connects Kerman city with business travel, mining-service teams, public administration, tourism, and industrial decision-makers operating across Sirjan, Rafsanjan, Bam, and other provincial
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Zarand Coal Mining Area
Zarand Coal Mining Area matters in the Hormuz Graph as a coal-mining district in northern Kerman, connected to mining services, industrial fuel and materials logic, steel-related input chains, and road-rail logistics toward Kerman, Yazd, and central Iran. Its role differs from Kerman’s iron-ore nodes around Sirjan and Bafq-facing corridors because Zarand is [5]
Open Hormuz profile - Related Hormuz infrastructure
Jalalabad Iron Ore Mine
Jalalabad Iron Ore Mine matters in the Hormuz Graph as part of Kerman Province’s iron-ore and metals geography, complementing larger mining-industrial nodes around Sirjan and central Kerman. Its role connects mineral extraction, mining services, freight movement, equipment demand, and steel-sector materials flows in a province where mines shape industrial la[6]
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Arge Jadid Special Economic Zone
Arg-e Jadid Special Economic Zone matters in the Hormuz Graph because it is tied to Bam’s industrial base and Kerman Province’s manufacturing geography, especially automotive and parts-related activity. Its relevance comes from being outside Iran’s main metropolitan industrial belt while still connected to southeast trade routes, Kerman’s mining-industrial e
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What changed
Recent developments
Seridoon copper project construction reported
USGS reports NICICO began construction in March 2023 on the Seridoon project in Kerman, designed for 550,000 t/yr of concentrate and scheduled for completion in 2027.[1]
Why it matters: It is the clearest identified new Kerman copper development, but current physical progress and financing status need confirmation.
Sarcheshmeh Phases 3 and 4 initiated
USGS reports that two Sarcheshmeh expansion phases began in 2023, with stated combined capacity additions of 622,000 t/yr of copper concentrate and 6,115 t/yr of molybdenum concentrate.[1]
Why it matters: The projects could materially deepen Kerman’s processing base, but the reviewed evidence does not establish commissioning.
NICICO group production rose in Iranian year 1403
A secondary report stated that NICICO subsidiaries, including Sarcheshmeh and Meiduk but also non-Kerman assets, produced 1.365 million tonnes of copper concentrate and 292,487 tonnes of cathode in Iranian year 1403.[7]
Why it matters: It supports evidence of group-level operating momentum but must not be interpreted as Kerman-only production.
Hormuz knowledge graph
Connected intelligence
Supporting Hormuz pages that extend the same market story and help verify its context.
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Data gaps and verification needs
- Current ownership and sanctions-screening status of operating and EPC counterparties.
- Current resource and reserve statements under an internationally recognised reporting code.
- Site-level water balance, tailings-storage condition, closure liabilities and environmental permits.
- Project CAPEX, funding source, schedule, procurement status and contracted offtake for Seridoon and Sarcheshmeh expansions.
Research record11 sources used
- The Mineral Industry of Iran in 2020–2021 / 2023 Minerals Yearbook advance release U.S. Geological Survey · 2026-03
- OFAC FAQ 666: What does E.O. 13871 do? U.S. Department of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control · 2019-08-06
- The Sarcheshmeh thickened tailings disposal project Australian Centre for Geomechanics · 2011
- Global Critical Minerals Outlook 2025: Executive Summary International Energy Agency · 2025
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- Copper concentrate production increased 8% in Iranian year 1403 CHN · 2025
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