Kuwait Times

Mongolia on brink of mega mining deal with Orano

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DAVOS: Mongolia is close to reaching an agreement with French multinatio­nal nuclear company Orano to exploit a vast uranium mine, Prime Minister Luvsannams­rai OyunErdene told AFP in Davos.

French President Emmanuel Macron and his Mongolian counterpar­t Ukhnaagiin Khurelsukh signed a memorandum of understand­ing in October to allow Orano to exploit the Zuuvch-Ovoo mine in southwest Mongolia. An investment agreement was initially expected by the end of this year, but it may be reached sooner. “At the moment, our government­al working group is working on environmen­tal and technologi­cal evaluation­s on the project to reach a final agreement with the French side,” Oyun-Erdene told AFP on the margins of the annual World Economic Forum summit in Switzerlan­d.

Oyun-Erdene said he had spoken at the Davos luxury ski resort with the owners of both Orano and British-Australian mining group Rio Tinto, with whom Mongolia has signed an agreement on the Oyu Tolgoi copper and gold mining mega-project. “It is crucial for us to share the knowledge and good practices that we had with Rio Tinto, with Orano too, so that we can reach a good quality agreement in a short period of time,” Oyun-Erdene said through an interprete­r.

Speaking to AFP in Paris, Orano confirmed negotiatio­ns were ongoing with the Asian landlocked country sandwiched between giants China and Russia. “Orano is committed to collaborat­ing with the Mongolia government in order to reach a mutually beneficial agreement,” said the company based southwest of the French capital.

Mongolia’s mining sector is “really important”, stressed Oyun-Erdene, “It’s the main sector of our export”. But it is not the only one, and at Davos the premier met with tourism agencies, think tanks and representa­tives of the energy sector, including Chinese renewable energy multinatio­nal Envision.

“So in the future we are trying to develop other sectors of (the) economy as well as find innovative solutions,” said Oyun-Erdene. Mongolia remains largely dependent on coal but the country is “making efforts to develop our renewable energy sector.” In an attempt to diversify the economy, something Oyun-Erdene insists is “crucial for developing countries like Mongolia”, the country is “working on the possibilit­ies to produce hydrogen from coking coal”. Mongolia is one of the world’s largest coal exporters and the capital Ulaanbaata­r is often one of the most polluted on the planet.

The country stands 116th out of 180 on the Transparen­cy Internatio­nal corruption perception index. Pope Francis even discussed the issue during a visit there last year. “Corruption remains... one of the greatest challenges in Mongolia,” Oyun-Erdene acknowledg­ed, although he insisted it was something the country is trying to tackle. “We have made publicly available the expenses of the state owned enterprise­s, their procuremen­t, the process of tenders.

“And also we have disclosed informatio­n on the involvemen­t of some of the politician­s in corruption cases and the loans they got.” Oyun-Erdene said he met with Transparen­cy Internatio­nal at Davos to seek advice in the fight against graft. Mongolia will “continue this fight against corruption, whether I will stay as the prime minister or not,” he added.

 ?? ?? Mongolia is close to reaching an agreement with French multinatio­nal nuclear company Orano to exploit a vast uranium mine.
Mongolia is close to reaching an agreement with French multinatio­nal nuclear company Orano to exploit a vast uranium mine.

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