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Sources say that Guinea has cancelled EGA's mining license

Two people familiar with the matter said on Wednesday that Guinea had begun a process of revoking Emirates Global Aluminium's mine licence.

Emirates Global Aluminium is owned equally by Abu Dhabi sovereign fund Mubadala and Dubai sovereign fund Investment Corporation of Dubai. It operates through its Guinea Alumina Corporation subsidiary one of the world's largest bauxite mining operations in Guinea.

In a reply, the company stated that it "continues to work hard to find a solution with the government so we can resume our operations."

EGA and the Government of Guinea have been involved in a dispute since October last, when the authorities suspended its bauxite mining operations and exports. They cited customs duties as the reason for the suspension.

We have withdrawn the mining license of GAC. "A notification has been sent in this regard," said one source, a senior official of the government who asked to remain anonymous because they weren't authorised to talk.

Guinea's decision to cancel EGA’s licence is part of a larger trend in which resource-rich nations are seeking greater control over their wealth. This could have a major impact on the global mining industry.

In particular, the military-led governments of Guinea, Mali and Niger, as well as Burkina Faso have been pushing to rewrite laws and contracts governing mining, detain executives in mining, suspend operations and seize product in order to gain more control and revenue.

The Emirati Company began operations in Guinea in 2019. It will export around 14 million tons of bauxite by 2022.

In March, it said that the suspension of activities in Guinea led to a decrease in exports of bauxite from 14,1 million wet-metric tonnes in 2020 to 10,8 million wet-metric tonnes in 2024.

Guinea is the second largest producer of bauxite in the world after Australia.

EGA's operations in Guinea include a 690 square kilometer mining concession which contains approximately 400 million tonnes of mineral resources. Saliou Samb, Conakry, Guinea. Additional reporting by Hadeel al Sayegh, Abu Dhabi, and Maxwell Akalaare Adombila, Dakar. Writing by Bate Felis Editing by Tomaszjanowski, Elaine Hardcastle, and Matthew Lewis.

(source: Reuters)