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Burkina Faso will nationalise additional industrial mines: PM

Burkina Faso intends to take over more industrial mines owned by foreign companies, said its Prime Minister, as it seeks to increase its revenue from its natural resources.

Burkina Faso, like its neighbours Mali, Niger and Mali, is seeking greater control over their resources. Last year, it revised its mining code and created a new mining company for the state, Societe De Participation Miniere Du Burkina (SOPAMIB).

In a late-last-year deal, it used SOPAMIB in order to take control of two industrial mines that were previously owned by Endeavour Mining, a London listed company.

In a late-night broadcast of a national television speech, the Prime Minister Jean Emmanuel Ouedraogo announced that the government intended to expand its control over resources.

He said that "SOPAMIB had already recovered two mines industrial, Boungou and Wahgnion. This will continue."

Investors are worried about the reforms in the mining sector. Burkina Faso’s military-led Government says that changes are needed to maximize revenue and relaunch an economy affected by insecurity.

The price of gold has risen over 25% in the past year due to geopolitical unrest and President Donald Trump’s unpredictable trade policies.

Burkina Faso has been fighting jihadist militants in the country since 2015. In 2023, it produced more than 57 tons.

There are mining companies such as West African Resources Ltd. and IAMGOLD, both of Australia.

The new mining code gives priority to national expertise and local providers, as part of a government-led revolution in the way its mineral wealth is managed.

Burkina Faso has shifted its focus to Russia in order to increase economic and security cooperation.

It granted a licence for industrial mining to Russian miner Nordgold last week. The project is a gold one in the Kourweogo Province of Burkina’s Plateau-Central Region.

Ouedraogo stated that existing state-controlled mines have been successful. The National Precious Substances Company collected over eight tons gold in 2024, and more than eleven tons in the first three months of this year. This was primarily due to artisanal mining.

He added that the government will also establish a national reserve of gold for the first ever time in its history.

He said, "We need to see the benefits of mining and not just the negative effects on the Burkinabe population." (Writing and editing by Maxwell Akalaare Adombila, Louise Heavens, Joe Bavier and Jessica Donati)

(source: Reuters)