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Copper

Pima County, Arizona

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Map of Pima 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 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 In that year, 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

In Pima County, much like nearby Greenlee County, copper mining began in the 1870s. Mining activity in Pima County flourished in the late nineteeth century, particularly as the arrival of the Southern Pacific Railroad brought increased commerce and traffic to the region. The copper-mining industry followed a series of boom-and-bust cycles throughout the following decades, with particular spikes during the two world wars, when demand soared. Today, copper output in Pima County is driven by operations at three open-pit mines: Sierrita, Mission Complex, and Silver Bell.

Production

In 2014, the combined copper production from Pima County’s three major mines totaled 175,000 metric tons.5 This output constituted 22% of national production for that year.6 Freeport-McMoRan Inc. manages the Sierrita mine, the top-producing operation in the county, while ASARCO LLC owns both the Mission Complex and Silver Bell mines.7

Copper production at Pima County’s three major mines8

Chart shows annual copper production at Sierrita, Mission Complex, and Silver Bell mines. Total copper production for all three mines was between 160,000 and 200,000 metric tons each year.

Employment

Copper mining makes up a relatively small portion of Pima County’s overall employment, largely as a result of the Tucson metropolitan area’s more diversified economy and workforce. In 2015, copper mining and related activities accounted for less than 1% (2,230 workers) of Pima County’s total private-sector employment of 285,383.9 Data for mining and support activities for the entire mining industry shows an overall increase in employment in Pima County from 2005 through 2015.10

Wage and salary employment in Pima County:
Mining industry vs. all other industries11

Chart shows the number of jobs in the copper mining industry in Pima County from 2005 to 2015. The y-axis, which represents the number of wage and salary employees, tops out at 350,000. The total number of jobs in Pima County each year ranges from about 260,000 to just over 300,000. The percentage of jobs in the mining industry ranges from 0.45 to 0.9%.

Revenue

State revenue from copper extraction is directed back to Pima 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.12 In the 2015-2016 fiscal year, $12.2 million was distributed to all cities and counties in Arizona from the severance tax on metals.13

Pima County derives revenue from copper mining within its borders. However, in order to protect individual mines’ sales information, the state does not disclose what percentage of the $12.2 million distributed to all cities and counties in Arizona from severance taxes goes to Pima County. In the 2015-2016 fiscal year, Phelps Dodge Corporation (now Freeport-McMoRan Inc.) and ASARCO LLC, the two largest copper-mining companies in the country, which operate the three largest mines in Pima County, ranked 2nd and 4th respectively in terms of largest property tax payers.14 15 These funds are channeled toward public services such as infrastructure development, public safety, and local schools.

ASARCO LLC also pays royalties to both the state of Arizona and the Tohono O’odham Nation as part of the leasing agreement to operate the Mission Mine, which is located on both state-owned and Indian land.

Costs

Publicly available government sources specifying the fiscal costs of copper mining in Pima County were not 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 June 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 mine level from 2005-2016. The U.S. Geological Survey had not yet published an updated Minerals Yearbook for 2015 and 2016 at the time of updating this case study.
Employment The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages publishes mining-industry data at the Pima County level using NAICS codes 212 (Mining Except Oil and Gas) and 213 (Support Activities for Mining) from 2004–2013. BLS is missing data for NAICS codes specific to copper or metal mining prior to 2010.
Revenue Revenue information was gathered from a range of Arizona state and county government sources for 2015, including the Arizona Department of Revenue and the Pima County 2015 Comprehensive Annual Financial Report. Revenue years refer to Arizona fiscal years (for instance, “2014” refers to FY 2014-2015). 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

  1. U.S. Geological Survey, 2016 Copper Commodity Summary (PDF) 

  2. Arizona State University, The Economic Impact of Mining in the State of Arizona (PDF) 

  3. Ibid. 

  4. Ibid. 

  5. U.S. Geological Survey, 2014 Minerals Yearbook: Copper (PDF) 

  6. Ibid. 

  7. Ibid. 

  8. Ibid. 

  9. Bureau of Labor Statistics, Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages: See NAICS Codes 212 (Mining Except Oil and Gas) and 213 (Support Activities for Mining), 2015 

  10. Ibid. 

  11. Ibid. 

  12. State of Arizona, 2015 Tax Handbook (PDF), p. 27 

  13. Arizona Department of Revenue, 2016 Annual Report (PDF), p. 39, table 7 

  14. Pima County, Arizona, Comprehensive Annual Financial Report (PDF), 2015, p. 170 

  15. Ibid.