The refinery has a daily production capacity of 900kg of gold and 200kg of silver |
Sudan’s President Omar al-Bashir has opened the country’s
first gold refinery,
which officials say is one of Africa’s largest plants.
Analysts
say it is part of a strategy by the Khartoum government to deal with the loss
of oil revenue following the session of South Sudan last year.
The
Sudan Gold Refinery will produce more than 328 tonnes of gold
each year.
Last
month, the finance ministry said the export of gold ore from Sudan would be
banned once the refinery opened.
According
to the Reuters news agency, Sudan hopes to sell gold worth up to $3bn (£617m)
this year, double last year’s gold revenue.
The
country has great mining potential, but overall production figures are hard to
verify because unofficial miners account for a large part of the gold industry,
the agency says.
The new
refinery, which will also process silver, is intended to reduce the amount of
gold smuggled to other markets, such as Dubai, as producers should receive more
money for higher-quality gold, it says.
“The
refinery is the first project of its kind in Sudan and the second in Africa for
producing and extracting gold and silver with high quality and purity,” China’s
official Xinhua news agency quotes the director of the refinery, Mohamed Hassan
Osman, as saying at the inauguration.
Another
refinery director, Azhari Altayeb, said the plant would also process gold from
countries in the region such as Egypt, Eritrea, Chad and the Central African
Republic, reports the Sudanese Media Center, a website which has close links to
the government.
South
Africa’s Rand Refinery, which describes itself as one of the world’s largest
gold refineries – processing “most of Africa’s gold”, has a capacity to produce
600 tonnes of gold annually.
South
Sudan seceded in July 201,1 taking with it three-quarters of the former
country’s oil production – though it relied on pipelines routed through Sudan
for export.
In
January, a row with Sudan over oil transit oil prompted Juba to shut down its
entire oil production of 350,000 barrels a day.
The
move cut government income in Sudan, forcing Khartoum to impose spending cuts.
Negotiations to end the dispute are ongoing.
BBC
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