Parliament has passed new operating
rules the require all mining companies licensed in the past one year to
cede a portion of their business to the government for free.
The
rules, which do not apply to companies that were awarded mining
licences earlier, give the government the right to a 10 per cent stake
in all mining operations licensed after May 2016.
“The
State right to a free equity participation shall not apply to any right
that has been granted to a holder to mine or exploit a mineral before
the coming into force of the Mining Act,” the Mining (State
Participation) Regulations 2017 say.
The provision is
different from the one that prescribes the formula for sharing mineral
wealth between mining firms, national government, county governments and
local communities.
The Mining Act, which came into
force on May 27, 2016, entitles the government, through the yet to be
formed National Mining Corporation, to acquire “a 10 per cent free
equity participation or free carried interest in the mining operations
to which the licence relates.”
The law also requires
the Cabinet Secretary responsible for mining to make regulations that
provide for State participation in mining or prospecting operations with
the holder of a mineral right.
“Where a mining
licence is granted in accordance with the Mining Act, the State shall
not make or pay any financial contribution to the holder of a mining
licence in respect of the interest acquired under sub regulation (1),”
says the law, meaning the State is entitled to a 10 per cent
shareholding for free.
In addition to the free carried interest or equity, the
law gives the government the option of purchasing additional interest
or share capital in the holder of the licence but only with the
agreement of the licensee.
“Any additional interest
that the State may acquire shall be agreed with the holder of the mining
licence and the purchase shall be at a fair market value,” the rules
state. The new regulations were tabled in the National Assembly on June
7, 2017, a week before the House went on an indefinite end-of-term
recess.
Mining
secretary Dan Kazungu is now expected to send a written notice to the
holders of licences, asking them to award the State the 10 per cent
interest in their business for no consideration.
“The
Cabinet Secretary and the holder shall agree on the timeframe for the
issuance of shares and in any case shall not be more than one year after
the grant of the mining licence,” Mr Kazungu said in the gazette
notice.
Mining companies are prohibited from diluting
any free carried government interest unless the same is transferred,
assigned or sold in part or entirely to the holder or any other party.
The
regulations require qualified mining companies to issue the government
the shares, enter the same in the appropriate register and issue a share
certificate to the State in accordance with the laws of Kenya.
The government does not have a direct stake in mining deals under the current law.
Mining
firms have in the past criticised the granting of licences on a
first-come-first-served basis, arguing that it gives mining rights to
well-connected speculators who then sell them to real investors.
“The
purpose of these regulations is to provide for State participation in
prospecting or mining operations carried out by the holder of a mineral
right,” says the new set of laws.
Kenya’s Constitution
requires all new oil and gas exploration rights that are negotiated with
the Ministry of Energy to be ratified by Parliament.
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