BAMAKO, Mali
Mali's military government has begun enforcing a provisional order to seize gold stock at Barrick Gold's Loulo-Gounkoto site, the Canadian miner said in a note to Malian staff, warning again that it may have to suspend operations at the complex.
The move suggests that Mali
authorities are not ready to back down in a standoff over
a contract based on new mining rules as they push for a greater share of
revenues from Western miners.
"A provisional order to
seize our existing gold stock was issued last week and the Malian government
began its enforcement on Jan. 11," Barrick said in the staff memo.
Two Barrick employees in Mali
and a consultant working for mining companies confirmed the authenticity of the
letter seen by our coprrespondent.
Speaking on condition of
anonymity, the employees said it was sent to staff on Sunday.
Barrick has not said what
volume of gold is at risk, but one of the employees said Loulo-Gounkoto's stock
was around 4 metric tons, citing internal estimates.
This amounts to nearly $380
million, based on spot gold prices on Monday.
Responding to a request for
comment, Barrick said it had nothing to add beyond what it said in a Jan. 6
statement.
In that statement, the world's
second-biggest gold miner by volume had warned that it would have to suspend
operations at Loulo-Gounkoto temporarily if restrictions on its gold shipments
were not lifted within the week.
The threat remains on the
table. In Sunday's note to staff, Barrick said "if the situation is not
resolved quickly" it may be forced to follow through on the suspension.
Stocks finished mostly higher
Monday with the S&P 500 bouncing off a two-month low as U.S. Treasury
yields stayed elevated with investors dialing back expectations on the pace of
interest rate cuts from the Federal Reserve.
The Malian authorities did not
immediately respond when asked to comment.
Loulo-Gounkoto accounts for
around 14% of Barrick's 2025 estimated gold output. Meanwhile gold is Mali's
top foreign currency earner, accounting for more than 80% of total exports in
2023.
The dispute comes at a delicate
time for many Western miners in West Africa, industry insiders say.
Military governments in Mali,
Burkina Faso and Niger are all trying to renegotiate terms to gain a bigger
share of mining revenues after a series of coups that have seen them shift away
from their traditional backers France, the United States and the United Nations
towards Russia and elsewhere.
Mali, Africa's second-largest
gold producer, has issued an arrest
warrant for Barrick Chief Executive Mark Bristow and detained Barrick
staff. @osoropj@gmail.com
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