Minister of Lands and Natural Resource, Nii Osah Mills
says major plans are underway to set up a gold refinery to enable the country add
value and fetch higher dividends from gold production.
“Ghana needs to have a major gold refinery and there
are plans to see how that can be put together, but they remain plans at this
stage; they has not been firmed-up or operationalised.
“We are looking to see how to firm-up those plans as
they are on the drawing table. We are trying to look at the pros and cons but
certainly it is on the drawing board; at a later stage we will make a
pronouncement,” Minister Mills told B&FT in Accra.
Government early
this year announced its readiness to partner any investor to help establish a
gold refinery plant for adding value to the country’s gold.
Owing to the fluctuation of global gold prices, the
establishment will set the country on a better standing, as it is better for
the country to add value to its precious metal to get real monetary value from
it.
Ghana, the second-highest gold producing country in
Africa after South Africa has attracted major multinational mining companies
including Newmont Mining Corporation, Gold Fields Limited, AngloGold Ashanti,
Golden Star Resources among others. Artisanal gold mining is believed to have
started as far back in the 14th century.
These companies export the raw metal for processing
overseas due to lack of in-country refinery.
Currently, Asap Vasa
Company Limited, a multi-million dollar high capacity refinery plant, is the
only major gold refinery plant in the country -- operating and refining 100
kilogrammes of gold daily into granules, coins and bars, and is owned by four
young Ghanaian entrepreneurs.
The refinery purchases
all of its raw gold from licenced small scale miners and refines them to
international quality standards of 99.9% fineness for the local and
international gold markets.
Minister Mills, inaugurating a nine-member board of
the Minerals Commission in Accra, said government has devoted a lot of
resources to nurture the Commission since its establishment to create an
attractive investment climate.
“There is no gainsaying the fact that the mining
sector has over the years played a major role in development of the country’s
economy.
“Through the work of the Commission, the economic
contribution of the country’s mining sector has progressed steadily, over the
years.
“There is however room for improvement, especially in
the social and environmental dimensions of the sector’s impacts, to ensure that
benefits to Ghanaians are maximised,”
Mr. Mills explained that the focus of the sector has
been on a few minerals -- notably gold, bauxite, manganese and diamonds -- with
gold, being the most prominent.
He noted the need to diversify the country’s minerals
base with other minerals which the country has the potential to produce.
“I urge members to formulate policies to expand and
diversify the mining sector and shift the over-reliance on the exploitation of
traditional minerals, and also improve the capacity of small scale mining
operations and reduce illegal mining.
“Members of the Commission must help government secure
the continued development of a thriving mining industry that will contribute to
sustainable economic development of the country,” he stated.
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