Mining
companies in the country could cut spending by US$1.7billion in the next seven
years should the price of gold continue to remain low on the world market, a
report commissioned by the Ghana Chamber of Mines has indicated.
In
2013, the miners invested about US$3.7billion in their operations on the back
of a good season the year before -- but the price of the yellow metal has since
taken a nose-dive, forcing them to cut future expansion plans.
The
report -- which was prepared for the chamber by the International Council on
Metals and Mining (ICMM) -- said in view of the prevailing low gold price, mining
operations will progressively cut their expenditure for the next seven years;
reaching an all-time low of US$1.7billion in 2021.
The
reduction in expenditure for 2021 means that mining companies will have
succeeded in cutting by 50 percent what they spent in 2013.
The
life-cycle projections made by the report include what some seven mining
companies planned for production at the beginning of 2014, based on a US$1,300
per ounce gold price, and it is assumed that international and national policy
conditions will remain broadly as they are now.
Currently,
gold price is hovering around US$1120-50 per ounce on the world market.
The
data provided by the sample of seven mines comprises life-cycle projections on
sales volume and revenue, capital expenditure (capex), operational expenditure
(opex), social investments, tax payments, mine closure costs and employment
figures.
Since
2010 the mining sector has increased production volumes, but from 2014 onward
projections using the sample data show production decreasing by an average of
4.6 percent per year.
The
report said apart from the low gold price, which has constrained mine extension
plans, the decline in production reflects genuine reductions in production due
to the life-cycle stage of the mines in the sample.
Decline
in payments to gov’t
Ghanaian non-labour capex and operating
expenditure, and social investments, comprise half of all expenditures made in
Ghana and are considered local procurement expenditures.
Most local procurement relates to
contract services such as construction and transportation, utilities and
(maintenance) materials.
Compared to supplier and government
payments, salaries are a relatively small component of spending in Ghana, reflecting
the capital-intensive nature of the mining industry.
According
to the report, which was released in July 2015, while the fluctuating gold
price directly influences royalty and corporate income tax payments, the drop
in government income starting in 2014 is primarily due to capital allowances [which
is standard accounting practice to distribute the cost of acquiring capital (buildings,
machinery and equipment) over several years] in mining. Source:B&FT
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