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Copper

Greenlee County, Arizona

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Map of Greenlee County, Arizona

Copper is a major industrial metal used in construction, electronics, transportation, industrial machinery, and consumer products. In 2016, the U.S. was the world’s fourth-largest copper producer, mining 1.41 million tons of copper worth a total value of approximately $6.8 billion.1 In 2014, the last year for which state-specific production information is available, Arizona’s copper output totaled 893,000 metric tons , or 66% of the national total.2 Copper represented 89% of the total value of mining in Arizona, with Greenlee and Pima counties generating the majority of that production.3 If Arizona were a country, it would be the seventh largest copper producer in the world.4

Geology and history

Greenlee County has a long history of copper mining dating back to the mineral’s discovery in the area during the 1870s. Initial recovery operations drew prospectors to the towns of Clifton, Morenci, and Metcalf, where underground mining methods targeted high-grade copper ores. In the 1920s, the Phelps Dodge Corporation (now Freeport-McMoRan Inc.) became the single owner of mining operations in the jurisdiction and discovered huge reserves of low-grade ores in the area. However, when the price of copper collapsed during the Great Depression, mining in the region temporarily halted between 1932 and 1937, until Phelps Dodge Corporation converted its underground mining operations to open-pit methods that could profitably harvest lower-grade ores.5 The modern Morenci Mine was established and has been a significant economic driver in the county ever since.

Production

The largest-producing copper mine in North America is the privately owned Morenci Mine, located in Greenlee County. In 2016, the Morenci Mine produced 848 million pounds of recoverable copper, up from 537 million pounds in 2012.6 7 Production at Morenci had significantly declined following the 2008 global recession and associated copper price decline. Recently, production has rebounded and has surpassed pre-2008 levels.8 9 Despite production increases at the Morenci Mine, two leading copper producers in Arizona announced planned production decreases due to falling prices, but through the first half of 2016, production cuts have not been as large as expected.10

Morenci mine copper production and average copper price11

Chart shows annual copper production from Morenci mine from 2007 to 2016, with annual average copper price overlaid as a line graph. The y-axis represents millions of recoverable pounds of copper and cents per pound, respectively. Each year, copper production is between 400 and 1 billion recoverable pounds; the price each year is between $2 and $4.50 per pound. The highest price shown was in 2011, at over $4 per pound. The year in this period with the most production is 2015, with about 900 million recoverable pounds.

Employment

In 2014, copper production employed 1,893 people in Greenlee County. Copper mining employed 11,953 workers in Arizona in 2014, comprising less than 1% of statewide employment (out of 2,241,077 total workers).12 13 In Greenlee County, the ebbs and flows of employment mirror trends in the copper industry. County unemployment reached 18% in 2009 at the height of the recession before falling to around 7% in 2013, as global demand and prices stabilized.14 Freeport-McMoRan Inc. owns and operates Greenlee County’s Morenci Mine, after merging with Phelps Dodge Corporation in 2007, and serves as the key copper-mining employer.

Revenue

State revenue from copper extraction is directed back to Greenlee County primarily through the state’s severance tax. Arizona levies this tax on metal minerals (including copper) set at 2.5% on 50% of the difference between the gross value of production and the production costs. While 47.6% of this revenue goes to the state’s General Fund, the other 52.4% is distributed to cities and counties.15

Arizona also collects a Transaction Privilege Tax for the right to do business in the state, at a rate of 3.125% on the total gross receipts of taxable business.16 However, this tax does not apply to copper mining.

In 2015-16 fiscal year, Greenlee County received $5,254,315 in transaction privilege and severance tax disbursements.17 In publicly available documents, the Arizona Department of Revenue reports this revenue as one sum, and does not specify what percentage of the tax stems from copper mining. Greenlee County also collected $3,768,467 in local property taxes levied for general purposes, public health services, and flood control (out of a total $20.2 million in county revenue) in its 2015 fiscal year.18 While some portion of property taxes stems from copper mining, the percentage is not specified in publicly available data.

Costs

Copper mining activity is a key consideration in Greenlee County road planning.19 No additional publicly available government sources specifying fiscal costs of copper mining in Greenlee County were found.

Data availability

The table below highlights data sources used to compile this narrative, as well as any gaps in publicly available data.

This case study is current as of July 2017. Many data sources are updated regularly, and may show more recent figures than are included here.

Measure Data availability Data gaps
Production The U.S. Geological Survey published copper production data at the county level for 2015. Production information from a 2016 Freeport-McMoRan Inc. report shed light on the six-year trend of production at the largest copper mine in the county (and state). Arizona State University William Siedman Research Institute provided supplemental information on mining production for 2014. The Arizona State study, Economic Impact of the Mining Industry in the State of Arizona, was not updated for 2015.
Employment The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) provided Greenlee County copper-mining employment data for 2011. The Arizona State University William Siedman Research Institute provided supplemental information on mining employment trends for 2014. The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) does not have mining data (NAICS 212, 2122, 21223) for Greenlee County for 2012, 2013, or 2014. Neither BLS nor the U.S. Census Bureau has ten-year employment-trend data for the copper mining industry at the Greenlee County level for 2004–2013. There are several years and subindustries without data.
Revenue Revenue information was gathered from a range of Arizona state and county government sources for 2012–2015, including the State of Arizona 2015 Tax Handbook, Arizona Department of Revenue, and Greenlee County Annual Financial Report 2015. Data on how sales and use taxes relate to extractive activities in the county was not found.
Costs Data on connections between county transportation, emergency services, reclamation, and water-infrastructure investments and extractive industries was not found.

Notes