African mine firm won’t pull out of Lepanto project
>> Saturday, December 24, 2016
BAGUIO CITY—South
African-owned mining companies operating in the Philippines will not pull out
their investments in the country amid uncertainty over the Duterte
administration’s audit of over 40 mining firms nationwide.
Godfrey Oliphant,
deputy minister of the South Africa Department of Mineral Resources, said one
of their companies, Far Southeast Gold Resources Inc., is considered in South
Africa as a credible mining company “which is brave in infusing investments
inside and outside their country.”
FSGRI entered into a
joint venture with Lepanto Consolidated Mining Co. for the exploration and
development of the company’s Victoria gold project in Mankayan, Benguet.
“We just want
certainty for the sustained operations of our company in their pending projects,”
Oliphant said on the sidelines of the Annual National Mine Safety and
Environment Conference at Camp John Hay here.
“Uncertainty in the
country’s mineral industry will definitely affect foreign investments in the
rapidly growing industry, that is why it is now up to the government to provide
foreign investors with certainty so that there be liquidity in the infusion of
fresh capital in the industry,” the South African minister added.
Oliphant said the Phl
government must set the standards of the mining industry to help stabilize the
contribution of mining to the economy, adding that in South Africa, the
contribution of mining to their economy is roughly 70 percent.
However, in the
Philippines, mining contributes only 0.7 percent to the gross domestic product,
which is considered by many sectors as insignificant.
However, host and
neighboring communities consider mining as a key economic driver in their
respective areas.
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