• March 17, 2026

Authorities are currently reviewing three proposals from local investors to assume control of the asset, which is estimated to require up to $1 billion in fresh investment to restore full production.

The process follows the government’s decision to take over the mine formally operated by South Africa’s Gold Fields nearly a year after rejecting the firm’s lease renewal application.

According to Reuters, the shortlisted bidders include Engineers and Planners Company Limited, BCM International, and consortium Vortex Resources. Regulators are now assessing which of the applicants is best positioned to address the mine’s operational and financial challenges.

Ghana, which is pushing to expand local participation in its mining industry, declined to extend the lease of the Johannesburg-based operator in April—marking a departure from the long-standing practice of automatic renewals.

The transition comes as South African miner Gold Fields Limited exits one of Ghana’s long-standing gold-producing assets after nearly three decades of operations.

CEO Mike Fraser confirmed that while Gold Fields had sought an extension, it accepted the government’s preference for the asset to transition to local ownership.

Engineers and Planners, led by Ghanaian billionaire Ibrahim Mahama, has operated as a long-term contractor at Damang, giving it extensive operational knowledge of the mine’s systems and workforce.

Earlier this month, E&P secured a US$205 million financing package arranged by Stanbic Bank Ghana and Standard Bank of South Africa, with support from Ecobank Ghana and Absa Bank Ghana.

The funding will boost equipment upgrades, hard-rock mining efficiency, and long-term operational capacity, signaling growing confidence in local companies to manage major mining assets.

In recent years, Ghana has rolled out sweeping mining reforms targeting royalty structures, local content rules, and taxation policies to ensure a greater share of mineral wealth stays within the country.

These include plans to replace the long-standing flat 5% royalty with a sliding scale of up to 12%, alongside stricter requirements for in-country procurement and participation by Ghanaian firms.

However, these reforms have drawn significant pushback from the United States and other major mining stakeholders.

Washington, alongside China, the UK, Canada, and Australia, has mounted unusual coordinated diplomatic pressure on Ghana to reconsider or scale back the policy, warning that higher royalties could make the country one of Africa’s most expensive mining destinations and deter investment.

The U.S. position is closely aligned with concerns from global mining companies, which argue that the proposed rates could squeeze profit margins, delay new projects, and reduce long-term output.

Despite this, Ghana has signaled its intent to proceed, framing the reforms as part of a broader shift across Africa toward resource nationalism where governments seek to capture more value from rising commodity prices and reduce reliance on foreign firms.

Gold Fields’ feasibility study indicates that Damang could produce 100,000–150,000 ounces of gold annually for at least nine more years, though extending operations would require US$500–600 million in fresh capital.

Source: Africabusinessinsider

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *