The Citizen (KZN)

Gold Fields eyes expansion in Latin America

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Gold Fields’s chief executive Chris Griffith said the South African producer is looking to expand in South America, despite investor concerns over populist policies and risks of higher mining taxes there.

The company is considerin­g buying mid-sized gold assets in Chile and Peru, or those slightly smaller than so-called tier-one assets, though no deals have been struck yet, according to Griffith. That could include producing mines with minimum annual production of 250 000 ounces or projects with longterm investment potential. It may also look for opportunit­ies in Canada, though North American mines are expensive.

Gold Fields, which has seen a turnaround at its giant SA mine start to pay off, is shifting focus to more profitable operations outside the country, and already has an asset in Chile and Peru.

In Chile, the new government is preparing proposals for raising mining taxes to fund greater social spending and close equality gaps, though much of that is directed at copper. Peru is also looking at the mine industry to raise more for social spending.

“They are areas we like where we operate, and we are evaluating a number of opportunit­ies that we think will fit our portfolio in those areas,” Griffith said in an interview in Cape Town.

“We don’t want something that’s too small, but you know, again, the big tier-one assets are generally either very expensive or they are held by the majors.”

The Johannesbu­rg-based producer plans to raise annual gold production by as much as a fifth to about 2.7 million ounces by 2024, supported by its new Salares Norte project in Chile. Output is expected to start there in the first quarter of next year and reach more than 500 000 ounces a year by 2024, giving it tier-one status.

Adding more assets in countries like Chile and Peru may help lower costs, the CEO said. Still, populist rhetoric is a concern to investors, Griffith said.

Writers of a new constituti­on in Chile are in the final week of debating proposals that include restrictin­g private property rights, giving indigenous groups a bigger say in project approvals and boosting environmen­tal protection­s. In Peru, some members of President Pedro Castillo’s party are calling for mineral assets to be nationalis­ed.

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