Business Day

Saudi Arabia to boost mining sector

- Wendell Roelf Cape Town

Saudi Arabia will invest about $3.8bn to enhance access to geoscience data and reduce regulatory red tape as it looks to boost mineral exploratio­n, senior government officials said on Wednesday.

Government plans to jumpstart the Saudi mining sector form part of a broader industrial strategy aimed at diversifyi­ng the economy and attracting private sector investment­s worth 1.6-trillion riyals ($426bn) over the next decade.

Investment­s will be made through the National Industrial Developmen­t and Logistics Program (NIDLP), part of Vision 2030, a reform strategy led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman and intended to wean the economy off oil while creating jobs.

“For some time Saudi mining has been characteri­sed by a lack of publicly available geoscience data, longer processing times on licences and a lack of transparen­cy,” Khalid al-Mudaifer, vice minister of mining, told an African mining conference.

SAUDI MINING HAS BEEN CHARACTERI­SED BY A LACK OF PUBLICLY AVAILABLE GEOSCIENCE DATA AND A LACK OF TRANSPAREN­CY

He said the $3.8bn would be spent on making it easier to do business in the country and improving data quality to reduce the risks associated with investing in new mining opportunit­ies for gold, zinc, rare earth metals and other minerals.

Saudi Arabia is one of the world’s top phosphate suppliers and its mining sector employs about 250,000 people.

The vice minister also said the government was working on a digital platform to help finalise exploratio­n licences within 60 days, compared to six months at present.

He also said the law allows for 100% ownership and investors can apply for exploratio­n or mining licences.

Earlier, Abdulrahma­n alBelushi, who heads mining strategy at the NIDLP, said there were vast opportunit­ies in Saudi Arabia should investors look to exploit mineral resources valued at an estimated $1.3-trillion.

“Aside from the oil and gas in the eastern part of the kingdom, we have been blessed with tremendous geological potential that remains vastly unexplored,” he said.

The government has identified 51 potential exploratio­n projects, including 14 gold and 14 copper projects, covering about 1,351km² that could be among the first targeted, another official said.

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