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Zambia wants higher stakes in new mining projects

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According to Mines Minister, Paul Kabuswe, Zambia is eager to negotiate higher shares in new mining operations in order to increase revenue and spending on social programmes.

Kabuswe revealed that the negotiation would include state-owned ZCCM-IH, which would apply to future agreements but exclude mines that were currently in operation.

ZCCM owns 10% to 20% of mines, including those held by Barrick Gold, Vedanta Resources, and First Quantum Minerals. It also retained the remaining 51% of Mopani Copper Mines, which had previously belonged to Glencore, and sold the other portion to an International Holding Company entity based in the United Arab Emirates.

The Mopani and Konkola Copper Mines are among the businesses that have experienced difficulties, despite Zambia’s government setting a target of producing 3 million metric tonnes of copper within ten years.

 

The minister also revealed that it also plans to start buying minerals such as copper from projects it has stakes in to trade on its own. Zambia has been a mining powerhouse for well over a century and is one of Africa’s leading producers of copper. The nation’s economy depends heavily on mining, which generates 75% of its export income.

“Stakes in new tenements will actually be moulded around such kinds of partnerships,” Kabuswe said in an interview on Tuesday on the sidelines of the Africa Mining Indaba.

“We are looking closely,” Kabuswe said. “But looking closely, not in a negative sense, but hoping that things around them can be resolved so that it doesn’t affect ourselves.”

“We want to make sure that there is win-win, that there is no slave-master relationship, and we also want to make sure that there’s social impact,” he added.

The country’s government currently plans to increase copper production from approximately 850,000 metric tonnes to 3 million metric tonnes annually by 2032.

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Nigeria’s inflation hits 28-year high of 33.69% in April

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Nigeria’s consumer inflation reached a 28-year high of 33.69% in April, up from 33.20% in March, according to statistics agency figures released on Wednesday.

President Bola Tinubu’s administration has slashed petrol and energy subsidies and devalued the local naira currency twice.

To manage pricing pressures, the central bank has hiked interest rates twice this year, including the highest hike in almost 17 years. The central bank governor has stated that rates will remain high for as long as necessary to reduce inflation. The bank will host another rate-setting meeting next week.

When compared to the previous year, the inflation rate in April 2024 was 11.47 percentage points more than in April 2023, when it stood at 22.22 percent. This implies that the headline inflation rate has increased dramatically during the last year.

According to the National Bureau of Statistics, food and nonalcoholic beverages remained the largest contributor to inflation in April. Food inflation, which accounts for most of the inflation basket, rose to 40.53% yearly from 40.01% in March.

Price pressures have left millions of Nigerians facing the biggest cost-of-living crisis in decades, as they fight to satisfy their most basic necessities.

Tinubu has offered a 35% salary increase for state personnel to alleviate pressure on government workers. To assist disadvantaged households, his government has resumed a direct cash transfer program and provided at least 42,000 tons of grains such as corn and millet.

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Uganda discusses power line to South Sudan with China’s Sinohydro

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According to the president’s office, Uganda is in negotiations with Sinohydro Corporation Limited of China to build a $180 million power transmission line that would enable Uganda to export electricity to South Sudan, which is severely short on energy.

Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni received a group led by Vice President of Sinohydro Corporation Yang Yi Xin on Monday as part of the negotiations, according to a late-morning statement from Museveni’s office.

The project, according to the statement, will entail building a new substation and expanding two existing ones in addition to building a 138-kilometre high-voltage transmission line to provide power to South Sudan.

“We are very much willing to help develop this project with the required finance if needed,” Xin was quoted as telling the president.

The statement stated that Museveni endorsed Sinohydro’s proposal to carry out the project. Uganda and South Sudan inked a power sales deal in June of last year, enabling Uganda to sell electricity to South Sudan.

To enable Uganda to export electricity to South Sudan, the two nations inked a power sales deal in June of last year. The Chinese firm is completing a $1.5 billion, 600-megawatt hydropower project on the River Nile in Northern Uganda that is meant to be the source for electricity exports to South Sudan.

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