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Mining: an engine of progress

Pakistan has great future in mining because it has huge deposits of minerals


Dr Shahbaz Khan
January 31, 2021


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ISLAMABAD: We grew up hearing about abundance of minerals in Pakistan and their potential to bring economic change to the country.

However, so far we have not really been able to harness them to bring that change. While they remained mostly buried below the ground, the country kept on sinking in the quagmire of debt which stood at $276 billion as of June 2020.

In addition to the heavy debt, the country is embroiled in many other social and economic issues. This makes it imperative to look for all options for accelerated value creation and wealth generation.

Many countries have used their mineral resources very effectively for the above purpose. A few examples are India, Brazil and Chile. India fetched foreign exchange worth $29 billion through the export of gems and jewellery in FY20 along with exports of other ores and value added minerals valuing at $4 billion. It became the world’s second largest crude steel producer in 2019 with production at 111.2 million tons. Our challenges in this regard are well known.

Brazil and Chile have also established themselves as mining giants while securing a stable income of more than $30 billion from exports.

Despite their oil wealth, the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries are also developing their mining industry at an accelerated pace. Saudi Arabia is leading the pack with its mining company Maaden, established in 1997 and already among the top 10 mining companies in the world. They have a highly diversified revenue stream. As part of the same, they have established two fully furnished industrial mining hubs.

This reminds me of Pakistan’s memorandum of understanding (MoU) with Saudi Arabia in February 2019, under which Riyadh intended to invest $2 billion in Pakistan’s mining sector. But we have not heard anything in this regard since long. Successful collaboration with Maaden can help the economy to take a giant leap forward.

Another such opportunity was Reko Diq. Unfortunately, the hysteria, instead of rational thinking, engulfed most of the discourse in 2011 which culminated in the eviction of foreign investor.

However, we got a “reality check” when the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) in July 2019 slapped a fine of $6 billion. In all the cacophony, had pragmatism been allowed some room in 2011, the irritants in the agreement could easily have been negotiated and ironed out. Now, whenever we sit across the table with Tethyan Copper Company (TCC) – the operator of Reko Diq project – it would have the ICSID decision besides leveraging its position on the table.

Another such example is Tuwairqi Steel Mills established with an investment of $340 million with promise of another injection of $1 billion in the second phase. Its designed capacity was 1.28 million tons of high-grade steel while in the second phase the capacity would have grown to 1.5 million tons per year.

It has been lying idle since 2013, after successful performance testing, due to a dispute. While the government is striving for the revival of Pakistan Steel Mills, it is suggested that it may make some effort for reviving this asset too. It may require much less effort, resources and time. Its revival would give a major boost to the iron ore industry too.


There is market talk that this matter has also landed in ICSID. The issue deserves reconsideration with a fresh mind while taking a holistic view of the integrated value chain and its advantages for Pakistan.

Flawed agreements are always a nuisance, but letting them jeopardise core objectives is even worse.
I am sure that while planning our future in mining, we will keep in view the lessons learnt from the above experiences.

Pakistan has a great future in mining because it has huge deposits of minerals. These include world’s second largest coal and salt reserves and fifth largest copper and gold reserves.

The reserves of gemstones (fifth largest in the world) alone can prove to be a game changer. However, that would require a robust value chain based on modern technology, trained manpower and a disciplined mechanism for branding and marketing.

Pakistan’s current exports of the same stand at only a few million dollars per annum. India has set up more than 3,000 offices outside the country for marketing its diamonds. Only last year it generated foreign exchange of $18 billion from exports and as per experts Pakistan’s gemstones are far superior in quality vis-a-vis Indian stones.

In any major mining-driven initiative, Pakistan Mineral Development Corporation (PMDC) can play a lead role, though it may need some capacity building in order to assume that role.

As a first step, it may review the existing revenue stream and identify margins for augmenting it. Key parameters for steering this exercise should be process optimisation, commercial agility, technology, intellectual capacity building and training.

Some key targets can be set to grab a bigger slice of the global salt market because of its slow reserves depletion rate vis-a-vis its size. At present, out of the global export volume of $3.1 billion, Pakistan’s share is $50 million with the Netherlands at the top with $290 million and India with $237 million.

The performance of a country possessing the second largest salt reserves definitely needs attention. Any increase in revenue would require implementation of a disciplined marketing system, identification and bridging of infrastructure gaps around mines and a robust inventory management system.

Any sizeable revenue stream in order to thrive always requires an effective communication infrastructure, modern technology and competent professionals.

Therefore, identifying and removing infrastructure bottlenecks, establishing a centre of excellence for developing quality manpower and forging partnerships with global operators and technology providers also need a prominent place in the “to do” list.

The above are essential pre-requisites for entering the second phase ie long-term transformation. This, in my view, would require implementation of a growth strategy for PMDC for the next few decades, its conversion into a listed company and initiating a capacity gap audit while examining modern international mining companies.

A few other tasks include establishing PMDC as the centralised source of data archiving and digitising and establishing a framework for providing data on a commercial basis along with development of centralised hubs in mining districts by following in the footsteps of Maaden.

The third phase primarily pertains to consolidating the achievements of the previous two stages and building upon them further. By this stage, PMDC can consider offering services to other operators within and outside Pakistan for operation and maintenance, asset management, etc.

The experience of other countries which have achieved economic independence teaches us that the above is a guaranteed formula for wealth generation and that too at an accelerated pace. This is exactly what we need in view of our economic challenges.

The writer is a petroleum engineer and an oil and gas management professional


Published in The Express Tribune, February 1st, 2021.
 
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Plan to start marble processing plants in Mohmand SEZ under CPEC.
These industrial units will create almost wonder direct jobs for locals. In this context, FPCCI has demanded early facilities to SEZ to start work.



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Govt organizes 395 training sessions in 7 major cities for uplift of Gems & Jewelry sector

by The Frontier Post


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ISLAMABAD, Apr 25 (APP): Realizing the country’s true potential in the Gemstones & Jewelry sector, the present government has organized around 395 training sessions in seven major cities during the last fiscal year for skill development of the workforce, equipping them with modern techniques and technologies being applied in the gemstones industry worldwide.

Pakistan Gems & Jewelry Development Company (PGJDC) conducted as many as 23 training sessions in Karachi, 114 in Lahore, 31 in Peshawar, 40 in Gilgit, 127 in Quetta, 45 in Muzaffarabad and 15 in Sargodha for capacity building of the industry and it’s manpower, according to an official report available with APP.

The report mentioned that Pakistan’s Gems & Jewelry exports stood at $25.267million during the last three years, which cautioned that a lot of work still needed to be done for the promotion of this sector.

Accordingly, the incumbent government formed a Prime Minister’s Task Force on Gems & Jewelry with the mandate to identify the inherent issues and challenges in the institutional arrangements, policies and practices. It has been tasked to give recommendations for the development of this sector on modern lines.

In that pursuit, the Task Force formed around eight working groups, consisting of its members, with certain Terms of Reference (ToRs) to meet the ultimate goal of promoting this sector and increasing Pakistan’s exports.

Policy Working Group has been given the task to review existing policies, practices and institutional arrangements for exploration, mining, valuation, processing for value addition (cutting & polishing), trading and export of gemstones in the country. It would also propose a formal administrative structure of the Gems & Jewelry sector in accordance with the public sector reforms agenda and international best practices.

Performance Review Working Group would evaluate the efficiency of the attached departments of Petroleum Division, Ministry of Industries and Inter-Provincial Coordination, and suggest necessary measures for improving their performance.

Gemstone City Working Group would develop the concept of establishing a Gems & Jewelry City in Islamabad, equipped with all facilities for the comfort of every stakeholder.

Foreign Direct Investment Working Group would explore potential for investment in infrastructure development through public-private partnership and examine the scope for development of Clusters and Special Economic Zones with public-private sector partnership.

Ease of Doing Business Working Group would propose recommendations on developing customer-friendly products and solutions by the banking sector to facilitate foreign investment in the Gems and Jewelry sector of Pakistan. It would formulate a business framework to ensure ease of doing business in this sector.

Besides, it would identify impediments in trade (including tariff and non-tariff barriers) and optimum exploitation of this sector’s potential. The group would propose a coordination and consultation mechanism with provinces to establish one window facilitation centers for national and international investors.

Gemstone & Jewelry Potential Working Group would give an estimation of the economic potential of the indigenous gemstones industry.

Report Compilation Working Group would prepare recommendations on way-forward and measures for promotion of gemstone industry and allied infrastructure, including the gemstones trade city establishment, besides a time-bound action plan for each activity.

Gemstone and Jewelry Value Addition Working Group would look into the existing policies on jewelry, give recommendations on the development of Jewelry Value Chain and prepare concept papers on Gemstone & Jewelry City.

A variety of minerals like Peridot, Aquamarine, Topaz in different colours of violet, pink, golden and champagne, Ruby, Emerald, rare-earth minerals Bastnaesite and Xenotime, Sphene, Tourmaline, besides many types of Quartz, existed in Pakistan, making it prominent in the minerals world.

Experts believe that Pakistan, based on its potential in mineral wealth, has the great potential to become one of the major gemstones’ exporters in the world, by just taking a few essential steps to enhance the exploration of resources, their value addition and effective promotion.
 
. . . .
I heard we had surplus energy so why not use it to mine Bitcoin and Ethereum and ROI is much higher than anything else.
Pakistan has surplus, but 30% lost in between.
 
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Good luck finding graphics cards brother

Tell me one business where you don't have issues/Challenges? Yup, GPUs are scarce but at the government level, it can be done, if there is will.
 
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Gemstone lab to be set up in Peshawar


Bureau Report
April 27, 2021



In this photograph taken on June 24, 2014, a Pakistani craftsman checks a gemstone at a workshop in Peshawar. — AFP/File


A Pakistani craftsman checks a gemstone at a workshop in Peshawar.

PESHAWAR: The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government on Monday approved setting up a gemstone laboratory and technical training and certification centre to promote the mineral sector.

The decision was made at a meeting of the Mineral Investment Facilitation Authority chaired by Chief Minister Mahmood Khan, according to a statement issued here.

The meeting was informed that private sector companies would be engaged for establishing the laboratory to develop technical and professional expertise for processing raw gemstones and developing them into refined branded product to be introduced internationally.

The private companies would provide machinery and trained human resource for the centre.

The proposed centre-cum-laboratory would be established at the existing building of the mineral testing laboratory in Hayatabad.

The centre would provide international level training for processing and certification of gemstones products.

The forum discussed the matters related to mining activities in the areas notified as guzara forests, and also decided to constitute a committee to be headed by the additional chief secretary to look into the matter and come up with proposals for controlled mining activities in such areas.

Administrative secretaries of mineral, forest, law and tourism departments would be the members of the committee.

On the occasion, Mahmood Khan said it was one of the top most priorities of his government to protect the forests and increase the forest cover to the maximum level. He also underlined the need of utilising the mineral resources without causing any harm to forests.

Published in Dawn, April 27th, 2021
 
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Salt Mosque of Himaliyan Salt ( Pink Salt ) located inside the salt mine.

(Made of Salt Stones taken from Inside of Khewra Salt Mine)....

Location: Khewra, Punjab, Pakistan


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Small-scale mining: the community and the corporate


Zeenat Hisa
May 16, 2021



Accidents in dimension stone and gemstone mining operations in remote mountainous areas of KP and Gilgit Baltistan largely go unreported. — Dawn/File



WHILE the predicament of coal miners in Pakistan is relatively well known, sadly due to frequent fatal underground mining disasters, little comes to light about the life and work conditions of those engaged in artisanal small-scale dimension stone (ie marble, granite, etc) quarrying on the surface, or gemstone mining up on the mountains.

Under-reporting does not mean surface mining and gem digging is less dangerous. Stone mine collapse, causing death and injuries to workers, is not uncommon. In 2020, two such accidents in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa took lives of 29 workers. High-altitude gemstone mining poses great risk as digging is carried out along the veins in the mountain walls accessed by harnesses and ropes which requires climbing skills and agility. Accidents in dimension stone and gemstone mining operations in remote mountainous areas of KP and Gilgit Baltistan largely go unreported. Also, the implications of mining on the community is seldom documented.

According to an official estimate, 200,000 workers are employed in 1,400 marble and granite quarries in Pakistan, most of which are located in KP province. A cluster study on Mansehra and Abbottabad, brought out by the Planning Commission under the Cluster Development Based Mineral Transformation Plan in 2018, states that working conditions at quarries are exploitative: miners work on shifts of up to 14 hours and are not paid for overtime. Use of outdated blasting technique, instead of wire-saw precision cutting, often causes injuries and deaths and 50 per cent of the workers are not provided with insurance benefits and compensation. The study also noted that health and safety rules, labour laws and environmental regulations are not implemented in the sector.

In Pakistan, a resource-rich country, the mineral sector is dominated by small-scale informal mining operations. Historically, natural resources — pastures, grazing lands and mines — were under collective ownership of the people. Local people living in northern mountainous areas (GB and KP) explored and extracted minerals and gemstones on their own in small groups with the permission of village committees. According to a 2011 WB estimate, there are about 1,200 small-scale mining groups in GB. Artisanal high-altitude mining, organised around collective responsibility, is a source of livelihood for local people and the earnings from minerals supplement the incomes from farming. Community ownership and entitlement are governed under customary laws. This pattern of sustainable management of resources by local communities has continued in the GB region and in Kohistan district of KP province, a Shangla-based representative of Pakistan Central Mines Labour Federation, KP, tells this writer. Elsewhere in KP and other provinces, mines are owned and regulated by the federal and provincial governments, leased out to local or non-local investors who run the mines through contractors.

The dominant narrative views small-scale sustainable management of mineral resources by the communities as unlawful, disorganised and an impediment to growth. Since the last decade, pressure from international agencies (ie WB) has been increasing for private, corporate sector-led growth. Large-scale mining through foreign investment is considered to be a panacea for poverty. This line of thinking finds unquestioned approval by the political elite. Hence the dissonance between the state and the community. In 2009, the federal government issued an exploration licence to large-scale mining concern in the Karakoram Range. The locals successfully resisted this move and the authorities had to withdraw the licence.

The community, who is the main stakeholder in small-scale mining, is not taken on board for policy planning and legislation. The KP Mineral Sector Governance Act, 2016 and KP Mineral Titles Rules, 2017, were challenged by the Frontier Mines Owners Association as the government declared ownership of the mines in the newly merged districts and disregarded customary laws. The Peshawar High Court struck the laws down. Yet, in 2019, KP Minerals Sector Governance (Amendment) Act 2019 was passed without any debate and is still controversial.

The community of miners in Gilgit-Baltistan, represented by the GB Metals, Minerals and Gems Association, rejected the draft GB Mining Concession Rules 2014. According to the Association, the proposed regulatory regime was the same as “adopted by the rulers of the African and Latin American countries as a source of corruption to plunder the mineral resources by opening doors to MNCs resulting in the cleansing of the entire precious minerals just in a few years which was enough for centuries if locals extracted by themselves.” The rules enforced in 2016 and amended in 2019 are still disputed. The GB Metals, Minerals and Gems Association continues to demand rules to be in favour of local communities instead of foreign investors.

K. Lahiri-Dutt in her 2017 study of informal gemstone mining in Samaya Valley, GB, found that mining groups, comprising 12-13 members, are non-hierarchical in structure and well organised. Members of the group, a cook, a loader/supplier who all work on site for three months get one share each and one per cent of the earnings from extracted material goes to the village welfare fund. According to Lahiri-Dutt, miners’ groups represent “the essence of customary laws that govern the way natural resources have traditionally been managed in this remote and high-altitude area: recognition of community property rights and equitable sharing of benefits amongst all members of the community.”

The resolution to the conflict between the state and the artisanal and small-scale mining communities lies in respect of customary laws and integration of small-scale informal mining in to legal framework. Instead of inviting the corporate sector, which puts profit-making over dignity of human life and ecosystem, the state should encourage micro enterprises, strengthen organisational capacity of community groups and let the artisanal and small-scale mining serve as a catalyst for other productive activities.

The writer is a researcher in the development sector.

Published in Dawn, May 16th, 2021
 
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