President Mugabe receives a US$1 million check from Murowa Diamonds managing director Mr Zebra Kasete while Youth Development, Indigenisation and Empowerment Minister Saviour Kasukuwere looks on in Masvingo on February 15, 2013., a photo by Pan-African News Wire File Photos on Flickr.
Another shot in the arm . . . Angolan firm eyes Zim diamonds
October 30, 2013
Angola’s Catoca, one of the world’s largest diamond producers, expects to start exploring two fields in Zimbabwe next year following a mining agreement signed between the two countries on Monday, state news agency Angop reported.
Angola is the world’s fourth-largest diamond producer by value, and sixth by volume, but the government is keen to boost exploration activity both at home and overseas.
“Angola has a mining tradition that is now undergoing great growth and some experience in external investments which we want to extend to Zimbabwe,” Angop cited Geology and Mines Minister Francisco Queiroz as saying.
He said there are already advanced talks for Angolan companies to operate in Zimbabwe, highlighting Catoca, which expects to start exploration activities in two fields in 2014.
Angola’s diamond industry, which began 100 years ago under Portuguese colonial rule, is dominated by the Catoca mine, the world’s fourth-largest.
Russia’s Alrosa and Angola’s state-owned Endiama each own 32,8 percent of the mine, which is responsible for about three-quarters of the diamonds extracted in Angola.
Zimbabwe is aggressively seeking to attract investors to its mining industry. It possesses mineral wealth that includes what could be some of the world’s richest diamond mines. The European Union last month agreed to lift sanctions on the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation. The decision will allow the firm to sell its diamonds in Europe, potentially raising its revenues.
The country is expecting to send its first batch of diamonds for trade to Antwerp, Belgium, before the end of the year, with the country now assembling a high-powered delegation to visit the diamond trading hub over the coming days to tie the loose ends on the resumption of trade.
Officials in the diamond industry said the visit by the top leadership of the Antwerp World Diamond Council last week was a “giant step” towards the resumption of trade that had been stalled by the illegal sanctions regime imposed on the ZMDC and its subsidiaries by the EU at the instigation of Britain.
Angola’s mining industry is dwarfed by an oil sector which is the biggest in Africa after Nigeria’s. Mining has long focused on diamonds, but the country is seeking to explore other minerals and is conducting a major project to map its mining potential.
Queiroz said the agreement signed last Thursday could pave the way for Angola to explore other minerals besides diamonds in Zimbabwe.
– Business Reporter/AFP.
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