Mining

AngloGold, Barrick to sell 80% of Morila mine in conflict-ridden Mali

AngloGold expects its share of the net consideration for the purchase to be roughly $10 million or less, the company said.

Barrick said the move would allow it to focus on its strategy of “discovering, developing, owning and operating Tier One assets.”

The acquisition of Morila will turn Mali Lithium into a cash-generating gold producer.

The Morila gold mine poured its first gold in October 2000 and became the foundation stone of African gold giant Randgold Resources, now part of Barrick.

The mine halted operations last year, but ore stockpiles continue being processed. Mali Lithium said it planned to reopen the mine as soon as possible.

“Morila is one of West Africa’s great gold mines and we are excited and privileged to acquire a mine of Morila’s calibre with its past production plus Mineral Resources (gold endowment) of 8.7 million ounces of gold,” executive chairman Alistair Cowden said in a separate statement.

“This is truly a transformative transaction for the company as we become a gold producer,” Alistair added.

The acquisition of Morila, which lies adjacent to Mali Lithium’s Massigui gold project, is set to turn the Australian company into a cash-generating gold producer.

Morila, known in its heyday as “Morila the Gorilla”, is expected to produce approximately 26,350 ounces of gold from November this year to the second quarter of 2021.

The parties expect to complete the transaction by October this year.

Most miners safe

Mali President Ibrahim Boubacar Keita resigned on Aug. 18 after seven years as a head of state and dissolved parliament hours after soldiers detained him at gunpoint and seized power in a coup.

The following day, Colonel Assimi Goita declared himself the leader of the military figures behind the coup — a group who identify themselves as the National Committee for the Salvation of People (CNSP).

The events have sparked international condemnation and are likely to further destabilize the West African nation, following months of anti-government mass protests and a rising insurgency from Islamist militants.

Experts believe that miners operating in the country’s west and south are unlikely to face any significant threats to their assets. They will, however, have to deal with disruptions, including the imposition of a nightly curfew and the closure of all Malian borders, Alexandre Raymakers, senior Africa analyst at risk analysis company Verisk Maplecroft, said in a note.

Mining companies should also expect substantial administrative delays when dealing with authorities as government structures will be paralyzed by the ongoing political crisis, Raymakers wrote.

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