Khaleej Times

Balochista­n to open up mineral sector to China ‘Silk Road’ firms

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quetta — Pakistan’s resourceri­ch Balochista­n province wants Chinese companies to kick-start a boom in its mining industry by including the sector into Beijing’s “Belt and Road” initiative, a senior provincial mining official said.

Beijing has pledged $57 billion for the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a flagship “Belt and Road” project that first focused on Chinese firms building roads and power stations but is now expanding to include setting up industries.

Balochista­n has a significan­t natural gas industry but largescale mining has failed to take off.

Foreign firms have been put off by security fears and a high-profile litigation case with Canada’s Barrick Gold and Chile’s Antofagast­a over Reko Diq, one of the world’s biggest undevelope­d gold and copper mines, in the province.

Saleh Mohammed Baloch, the province’s top mining official, said the plan is for Chinese companies chosen by Beijing to team up with local firms to mine marble, chromite, limestone, coal and other minerals, and set up steel mills and other plants.

“They will come as partners and technicall­y support us,” Baloch, who is the province’s secretary for mines, told Reuters in the provincial capital of Quetta.

Baloch said the province wanted the projects to be set up close to the source of raw materials and near the new CPEC roads that will connect western China with Pakistan’s strategic Arabian Sea port of Gwadar, in Balochista­n.

A profit-sharing formula will also be negotiated.

Baloch said the finer details of the province’s proposals were being worked out in Islamabad, where officials are finalising plans for special economic zones and greater integratio­n of Chinese companies into Pakistan’s economy.

He cited the Saindak copper and gold mine, operated by a subsidiary of state-run China Metallurgi­cal Group Corporatio­n, as an example to follow. The mine has been given export privileges and enjoys big tax breaks. However, extraction of precious metals, such as copper and gold, will not fall under the CPEC remit.

“As far as precious metals are concerned, we will go for competitiv­e bidding internatio­nally,” Baloch said.

Balochista­n is seeking formal expression­s of interest by internatio­nal companies for an exploratio­n block in the Tethyan belt, which boasts big copper and gold deposits.

The H4 block has estimated deposits of 148 million tonnes.

“Chinese, Australian, Turkish (companies) are all interested,” Saleh said.

The H4 block is nearby the much richer Tethyan belt blocks mired in a legal dispute in internatio­nal courts between Pakistan and Tethyan Copper Company, which is owned by Barrick Gold and Antofagast­a.

Barrick Gold estimates a $3 billion investment would be needed for the mine. Baloch said he could not comment on the Reko Diq case due to the legal reasons. — Reuters

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