With indications that the
growth of gold production in Tanzania is slowing, plans are currently in
place to diversify the Tanzania mining industry into nickel, coal and
uranium by 2018.
According
to a new materials research report conducted by the British market
intelligence firm Business Monitor International (BMI), while the
country’s mining industry remains relatively small, it earns a
significant portion of Tanzania export revenues and boasts several key
foreign investors including African Barrick Gold and AngloGold Ashanti.
“The country has long been a producer
of gold [and] in the long term we also expect coal, nickel and uranium
production to become sub-sectors of Tanzania's mining sector,” noted the
report.
The report indicates that the country
possesses significant deposits of coal, cobal, copper, diamonds, gold,
nickel, silver and uranium.
In addition, a separate BMI report on
the oil and gas sector indicates that Tanzania has also recently
surpassed South Africa in its attracting oil and gas investments and
ranks alongside countries such as Angola and Mozambique as the most
appealing African countries for oil and gas investments.
"The countries have a more appealing environment for investment than South Africa," says the report.
According to the report, nickel, coal and uranium are expected to become sub-sectors of the Tanzania mining sector by 2018. |
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