Latest News

Congo peace project founder: First gold exports from the restive east will be in September

PeaceGold, a UK-based social enterprise, plans to export its first products from the'restive eastern Democratic Republic of Congo in September. This is despite last year's fighting that disrupted gold mining throughout the region.

PeaceGold, a nonprofit organization in the area, was established in 2013 to formalise artisanal gold mining and to reintegrate ex-combatants back into regulated employment, such as gold mining. This is a means to reduce conflict.

It was initially supported by Western donors, before moving to a commercial model.

Greg Valerio, founder of PeaceGold, stated that the project currently works with 11 artisanal mines in Ituri province, which represent nearly 25,000 workers and miners. The project is positioning itself as a viable alternative to Congo's mostly illicit artisanal trade. Analyses show that more than half of Congo's annual gold production is believed to be illegally exported. The United Nations reported that the Rwanda-backed M23 militia and other armed groups seized additional territory last year in an offensive in eastern Congo which killed thousands. M23-linked rebels forced some cooperatives to temporarily stop operations even though they weren't directly overrun, Valerio stated.

Although PeaceGold's model is well-supported by mining cooperatives, it can't trade gold because of its nonprofit status, Valerio explained.

He said that it is finalising its regulatory approvals and operational systems in preparation for the commercial launch. This includes securing working capital financing from an unnamed UK financial partner who will?fund gold purchase at mine sites.

The initial exports are expected to be slow and peak at 50 kilograms per month in year three. PeaceGold is aiming to keep 80% of the gold value within Congo, for the local infrastructure, compliance systems, and cooperatives.

"Congo does not have a problem with gold - it is a system problem that we are trying fix." Maxwell Akalaare Adombila, Bate Felix, and Kirsten Doovan edited the report.

(source: Reuters)