Rejected China locomotives cast shadow as Guinea’s Simandou mine marks milestone
As iron ore starts flowing, the West African country says it is making sure agreements are not derailed by geopolitical tensions


Guinean authorities are understood to have turned away a shipment of 18 Chinese-built locomotives in September, destined for the Winning Consortium Simandou (WCS), at the port of Conakry.
A government source said the shipment violated the co-development agreement – a pact signed by Guinea and the project’s international consortiums – that stipulated that locomotives must come from the United States.
“The locomotives were subsequently shipped back to China,” according to the source, who declined to be named because of the matter’s sensitivity. WCS has not yet responded to a request for comment.
The measure was not about targeting Chinese locomotives. “If they had brought in a locomotive made by any other country, we would have made the same decision to cancel the contract,” the source said.






