Business Day

DRC to declare minerals strategic

- Agency Staff Kolwezi Reuters

The prime minister of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) will sign a decree in coming days to designate cobalt and other minerals as “strategic” and therefore subject to higher royalties, mines minister Martin Kabwelulu said on Saturday.

The prime minister of Democratic Republic of Congo will sign a decree in the coming days to designate cobalt and other minerals as “strategic” and therefore subject to higher royalties, mines minister Martin Kabwelulu said on Saturday.

The change is part of a new mining code, which mining companies such as Glencore and Randgold oppose as it axes tax exemptions and hikes royalties and profit taxes. They have been holding out the hope that it might be watered down in further negotiatio­ns.

The government has not yet formally announced which metals will be classed as strategic in the new code and subject to royalties of 10%. Before the code was introduced, companies paid a rate of 2% for cobalt.

Addressing a mining conference in the copper and cobaltmini­ng city of Kolwezi, Kabwelulu said: “In the coming days, you will see the prime minister sign a decree to declare cobalt and certain other substances as strategic.” Miners of cobalt would have paid a royalty of 3.5% under the new code if its designatio­n had not changed.

The government considers minerals with the “strategic“designatio­n important for the economic, social and industrial future of the country.

The new code came into effect in June. Companies say its tax hikes and cancellati­on of 10year exemptions for existing projects against changes to the previous fiscal and customs regimes breach previous agreements with the government, and will deter further investment.

Kabwelulu said all companies are paying the royalties and taxes as stipulated by the new code, despite Randgold saying in August it was still negotiatin­g with the government. “I know that Randgold made a statement, but it’s not true,” he said.

Democratic Republic of Congo is Africa’s top copper producer and the world’s leading miner of cobalt, a mineral which has seen a surge in demand due to the manufactur­e of electric car batteries and mobile phones.

Big mining firms with investment­s in Congo include AngloGold Ashanti, Ivanhoe Mines, China Molybdenum, Zijin Mining and MMG. /

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