Politics and policy
By ALLAN ODHIAMBO
In Summary
- Goldplat says de-construction of the processing plant in Ghana and its relocation to Kenya in Kilimapesa, Trans Mara, has started in plans to expand its gold prospecting business.
London-listed miner Goldplat plans to relocate a gold
processing plant from a site in Ghana to south western Kenya where it
targets to double production in 2016.
Company chairman Brian Moritz said de-construction of the
processing plant in Ghana and its relocation to Kenya in Kilimapesa,
Trans Mara, has started in plans to expand its gold prospecting
business.
“The aim would be to double production to around
6,000 ounces per annum with ore being processed through a new gold
plant. With access to capital for the proposed project constrained and
the GRG CIL Gold Recovery Ghana Limited (GRG) Carbon-in-leach (CIL)
plant becoming available, an interim step is likely to be the moving of
this CIL plant to the site in Kenya,” he said on Monday.
Goldplat currently mines gold ore from the
Kilimapesa Hill area with additional material being sourced from
artisanal tailings within the block. The company also has assets in
South Africa and Burkina Faso.
The firm’s gold production in the year to June was
2,278 ounces, up from 1,163 ounces in 2014 with a total 919 ounces being
sold last year.
Earnings from gold slumped to Sh695.3 million last
year from Sh7.4 billion in 2013 and Sh13.9 billion in 2012, hurt by low
global prices that discouraged miners.
The 919 ounces is currently valued at Sh110 million
based on the price of $1,142.40 an ounce —which was below $1,000 in
July. It stood at $1,766 in August 2011.
Kenya awarded its first ever gold-mining licence in
late 2011 to Goldplat Plc, which began mining at Kilimapesa in Migori
in January 2012, pouring the first bar of gold ever produced in the
country.
But the weaker gold price and uncertainty over a
proposed mining law that forces foreign-owned firms to cede 35 per
cent of their mining operations to Kenyans dimmed its outlook, pushing
management to restrict operations in June 2013.
Though set for repeal under the Mining Bill 2015, the ownership remains gazetted.
“Kilimapesa is currently producing at a rate of
around 2,700 ounces of gold per annum and is working towards operational
break-even,” Mr Moritz said.
The Africa-focused miner said in April it is
targeting an acquisition to help expand its Kenyan operations near
Lolgorien in Trans Mara.
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