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Addis Ababa, November 28, 2009 – Ethiopia signed a
deal on Tuesday for a Saudi firm to extract an estimated 20 tones of
recoverable gold found in the Horn of African country last month, the
mines and energy minister said.
Two firms -- Saudi Arabia's Midroc Gold Co. and Britain's Golden
Prospecting Mining Co. -- discovered deposits estimated to contain more
than 40 tones of gold last month and applied for extraction licenses.
"We will sign an extraction agreement with the Saudi company today,"
Minister for Mines and Energy, Alemayehu Tegenu, told Reuters in an
interview, adding it would be mined over 11 years.
"We hope to sign an agreement with the British company next year," he
said.
The minister said Sakaro, a mining company wholly-owned by Midroc Gold
Co., discovered an estimated 20 tones in the Lege-Dembi gold belt.
Midroc is owned by Ethiopian-born Saudi business tycoon Sheik Mohammed
Hussein Al Amoudi.
Golden Prospecting Mining's find of about 23 tones is in western
Ethiopia.
Under the terms of the deal, Ethiopia gets 5 percent of royalties, takes
2 percent equity and will charge 35 percent tax. The extraction license
expires once 20 tones of gold has been extracted.
The Ethiopian government says it has identified possible reserves of up
to 500 tones in different regions.
The country now makes $105 million a year from gold exports and that
could double when Midroc starts its extraction, Alemayehu said.
The Horn of Africa nation has made $450.5 million from about 48 tones of
gold exports in the last 10 years, according to the National Bank of
Ethiopia.
Source: Reuters, Nov 24, 2009
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