Peru presidential candidates’ mining plans cast doubt on investment, industry leader says

Published 28/05/2026, 01:36 am
Updated 28/05/2026, 01:46 am
© Reuters. Popular Force presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori holds a press conference after the National Jury of Elections (JNE) announced that she will advance to a runoff election on June 7, in which she will compete for the presidency of Peru against candidate

© Reuters. Popular Force presidential candidate Keiko Fujimori holds a press conference after the National Jury of Elections (JNE) announced that she will advance to a runoff election on June 7, in which she will compete for the presidency of Peru against candidate

By Marco Aquino

LIMA, May 27 (Reuters) - The president of Peru’s National Society of Mining, Petroleum and Energy (SNMPE), on Tuesday warned that opposing mining policies from the two presidential candidates heading into the June 7 ​runoff vote may ‌jeopardize billions of dollars in investment.

Julia Torreblance, ​SNMPE president told Reuters that neither candidate’s proposals for the mining industry are sustainable.

• Right-wing ‌candidate Keiko Fujimori and left-wing candidate ⁠Roberto Sanchez prepare to face ​off in a vote that could reshape the outlook for one of Latin America’s most important resource economies.

• Torreblanca said neither candidate’s proposal "works or is sustainable in the long term."

• Fujimori proposes distributing ‌40% of mining royalties directly to communities near mines and creating a "fast track" for strategic mining projects with tax incentives ‌for reinvesting profits.

• Sanchez has proposed raising taxes ‌and royalties, reviewing large mining companies’ contracts, ‌and seeking a referendum to draft a new constitution to expand the state’s ‌role ‌in the economy.

• Torreblanca said a higher tax burden could deter investment in Peruvian mining projects totaling some $63 ⁠billion, 70% of which is in copper ‌projects in the country’s southern Andean regions.

• Total mining tax revenue ‌reached approximately 26 billion soles ($7.59 ⁠billion) last year, a record high ‌driven by elevated gold and copper prices, according to official data.

• Last year, the government transferred the equivalent of $2.93 billion to authorities in mining-affected regions for community development ‌from income tax and royalties, official data showed.

• Torreblanca called instead for strengthening the state to ‌ensure mining revenues are spent efficiently, ⁠citing more than 2,000 stalled public works projects.

($1= 3.426 soles)

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