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						African nations sense upper hand in minerals stand-off
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		 [February 08, 2019]   
		By Barbara Lewis and Joe Bavier 
 CAPE TOWN (Reuters) - African nations with 
		rich reserves of copper and cobalt needed for the shift to electric 
		vehicles sense they have the upper hand in negotiations with mining 
		companies that are struggling to secure better terms.
 
 Days of talks at the Mining Indaba in Cape Town - Africa's premier 
		mining investment conference - yielded no tangible breakthrough between 
		the miners and governments increasingly keen to reassert control over 
		their natural resources.
 
 Copper and cobalt reserves are giving nations such as Zambia and 
		Democratic Republic of Congo confidence because of the difficulty in 
		finding supplies elsewhere to meet the expected surge in demand. This 
		has emboldened them to seek higher tax revenues from foreign mining 
		companies.
 
 Mark Bristow, CEO of the newly enlarged Barrick Gold, emerged this week 
		as the big miners' most prominent voice, holding meeting after meeting 
		with mining ministers, culminating in a grand dinner on Wednesday night.
 
 But Bristow declined to be drawn on when he might get a deal in the 
		toughest jurisdictions of Democratic Republic of Congo and Tanzania, 
		whose governments are demanding terms the international mining companies 
		say are untenable.
 
		
		 
		
 "You can't negotiate with a deadline, especially in Africa," he told 
		reporters. The challenge, he said, was to avoid undoing decades of 
		progress as international lenders start calling in loan repayments, 
		piling the pressure on nations, such as indebted Zambia, and populist 
		governments make sweeping promises to their electorates.
 
 "Everyone has a responsibility to ensure the progress we have seen since 
		the end of the Cold War across sub-Saharan Africa," he told Reuters.
 
 "One of the biggest challenges right round the globe is populism and 
		people hanging on to power by promising things that are improbable when 
		it comes to delivering. That puts a lot of stress on a lot of things."
 
 Bristow has however made clear he is prepared to get rid of less 
		profitable assets, which may be in Africa.
 
 After Zambia announced new mining taxes, Barrick said it was considering 
		all options for its Lumwana copper mine there because the changes would 
		make it hard to generate adequate returns.
 
 NEW TAXES
 
 Zambia says it is open to discussions but will enforce the new taxes to 
		maximize earnings from its own resources.
 
 While Bristow has been the big miners' most audible representative in 
		Cape Town, nations rich in mineral resources were represented by Nana 
		Akufo-Addo, president of Ghana, Africa's biggest gold producer after 
		South Africa.
 
 He said countries such as his had "come of age" and international 
		companies should no longer expect to be given unusual tax advantages in 
		return for the right to mine.
 
		
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			Ghana's President Nana Akufo-Addo addresses the Investing in African 
			Mining Indaba conference in Cape Town, South Africa February 5, 
			2019. REUTERS/Mike Hutchings/File Photo 
            
			 
"The people of Africa do not have to be poor for others to be rich," he said.
 But as far as the miners are concerned, Democratic Republic of Congo and 
Tanzania are demanding far too much.
 
 Gold miner Acacia, majority-owned by Barrick, is in talks with the Tanzanian 
government over a $190 billion tax claim.
 
 Tanzania sent no senior officials to the Indaba. And Congo stuck to its guns.
 
On stage with Bristow during a panel on Congo's new mining code, the 
secretary-general for mines, Joseph Ikoli, said that, while the government was 
always open to discussions with its partners, the law, now approved, cannot be 
changed.
 Doing so would require sending it back to parliament, and analysts believe the 
law's popularity with the Congolese people make rolling it back politically 
unpalatable.
 
 In the light of these difficulties, miners said it would take years to 
re-establish trust, and investment would be driven away for decades. Industry 
would look for ways to make electric vehicles without cobalt, for example, 
because so much of it is concentrated in Congo.
 
 "If you look at a map of Africa, the mines are not necessarily built where the 
best geology is," said Daniel Betts, managing director of west African gold 
miner Hummingbird. Instead, they tend to be built where there is political 
stability.
 
 Many of the African governments remain confident, however, that companies will 
not go elsewhere, especially once they have already invested heavily in mines.
 
 Asked about foreign companies' complaints that their business would be damaged 
by Zambia's tax changes, Zambia's Mining Minister Richard Musukwa was 
dismissive.
 
 "They are always cry babies," he said.
 
 
 
However, other African nations in need of the kind of infrastructure development 
and employment big corporations can provide are offering tempting terms.
 
 Ethiopia, for example, is rolling out pro-business reforms after Prime Minister 
Abiy Ahmed swept into office nearly a year ago.
 
 The nation's Mines and Petroleum Minister Samuel Urkato said promoting the 
mining sector had become a priority and indicated further tax incentives were 
likely.
 
 (Additional reporting by Tanisha Heiberg; Editing by Giles Elgood)
 
				 
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