Dar es Salaam,
Barrick’s
Tanzania subsidiary Twiga Minerals has resumed exports of gold
concentrate after receiving clearance for its first shipments since the
lifting of a government ban imposed during a tax dispute with the mining
company.
The dispute originally
involved Acacia Mining, which was taken over by Barrick last year. The
Tanzanian government imposed a ban on exporting mineral concentrates in
2017 after accusing Acacia of tax evasion.
Tanzania
said it would lift the ban on January 24 when the two parties signed a
deal in which the government took a 16 percent stake in Twiga Minerals -
a new joint venture managing Barrick’s three gold mines.
“In
terms of its framework agreement with the government, the shipping of
some 1,600 containers of concentrate stockpiled from Bulyanhulu and
Buzwagi resumed in April and the first $100 million received from the
sale has gone to the government,” Barrick said in a statement on Monday.
“This initial payment will be followed by five annual payments of $40 million each.”
The deal to end the dispute included a settlement of $300 million to be paid by Barrick to the government.
Earlier
on Monday Simon Msanjila, permanent secretary at Tanzania’s ministry of
minerals, told Reuters that Twiga has been allowed to export the gold.
Barrick
CEO Mark Bristow told Reuters on January 27 that the gold to be
exported was worth between $260 million and $280 million.
The
more than three-month wait to export the containers has played in
Barrick’s favour, given that the price of gold has climbed by about 9
percent since the end of January, with investors buying the precious
metal as a safe-haven asset as the coronavirus pandemic spreads.
Barrick
also said that 90 percent of outstanding land claims at its North Mara
mine have been settled, with payment scheduled to start on Monday. The
North Mara mine has been hit by disputes pitting the community against
the mining company.
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