Pakistan to deposit $22.7 million in escrow funds to resume Reko Diq mining project

A file photo of the site of the gold and copper mine exploration project of Tethyan Copper Company (TCC) in Reko Diq, in Balochistan, Pakistan. (Photo courtesy: TCC)
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Updated 11 December 2022
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Pakistan to deposit $22.7 million in escrow funds to resume Reko Diq mining project

  • Reko Diq is one of the world's largest underdeveloped sites of copper and gold deposits
  • On Friday, Pakistan's Supreme Court endorsed settlement for Barrick Gold to resume mining

KARACHI: Pakistan on Sunday approved measures to ensure resuming mining at the Reko Diq project, one of the world's largest underdeveloped sites of copper and gold deposits, the finance ministry said.

The approval comes days after Pakistan's Supreme Court endorsed a settlement for Barrick Gold to resume mining at Reko Diq. The endorsement was a condition of the agreement for Barrick to restart work on the project in the southwestern province of Balochistan, bordering Afghanistan and Iran, in which it will invest $10 billion.

A meeting of the Economic Coordination Committee (ECC) of the cabinet on Sunday considered and approved two important agenda items related to Reko Diq, “thus paving the way for early start of the Reko Diq Project,” a statement issued by the finance ministry said.  

According to the terms of the agreed settlement, the ECC allowed the Finance Division to issue directives for the deposit of the “aggregate amount of interest to the sum of over $22.72 million in the escrow account from March 31, 2022 to December 15, 2022.”  

The ECC also allowed the Finance Division to arrange the amount of interest payable for the Balochistan government’s share in the project, amounting to $8.52 million from a loan of Rs65 billion already raised by the Government Holdings Private Limited (GHPL), according to the ministry's statement.  

The ECC also approved a proposal on a funding plan by the federal government for the share of Balochistan in the Reko Diq Project. As per the proposal, an overall funding commitment of $717 million over the period of 6 years will be provided by the federal government.

The Reko Diq mine is located in Pakistan’s southwestern Baluchistan province. The development of the project was suspended in 2011 after Pakistan denied the Tethyan Copper Company, a joint venture between Barrick Gold of Canada and Antofagasta Minerals of Chile, license to continue work.

The country’s Supreme Court then blocked the Tethyan Copper Company (TCC) in 2013 from developing Reko Diq following a court case into the procedure by which the contract had been awarded.  

However, Pakistan reached an out-of-court settlement with the mining firms in March this year to avoid paying a $9 billion penalty announced by the World Bank’s arbitration court.

Pakistan’s Supreme Court on Friday ruled in favor of the new agreement, observing that there was nothing illegal in it and it was not in violation of the court’s 2013 judgment.


Pakistan’s deputy PM speaks with Iran, Türkiye after UN rights vote on Tehran

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Pakistan’s deputy PM speaks with Iran, Türkiye after UN rights vote on Tehran

  • Pakistan voted against UN rights council resolution seeking to expand scrutiny of Iran
  • Dar discusses regional issues with Türkiye’s Hakan Fidan after World Economic Forum

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar held separate phone calls on Saturday with the foreign ministers of Iran and Türkiye, highlighting Islamabad’s growing diplomatic engagement on regional crises after backing Tehran at the United Nations Human Rights Council and amid wider discussions on Middle East stability.

Dar, who also serves as Pakistan’s foreign minister, spoke with Iran’s Seyed Abbas Araghchi after Islamabad voted against a resolution at the UN rights council in Geneva that sought to expand international scrutiny of Iran following a crackdown on anti-government protests that began last month and continued for several days.

“Foreign Minister Araghchi thanked DPM / FM for his strong support and Pakistan’s position at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva,” the foreign office said in a statement after the phone call.

While the resolution was adopted, Iran rejected it as “politicized” and described the council’s action as interference in its internal affairs.

Dar later spoke by phone with Türkiye’s Foreign Minister Hakan Fidan, with the two leaders reviewing developments following the World Economic Forum in Davos and agreeing to remain in close contact on key regional and international matters, the foreign office said.

Pakistan and Türkiye have increasingly coordinated diplomatic positions on regional issues, including Middle East tensions, as Islamabad positions itself as an active interlocutor in multilateral forums addressing conflict and humanitarian crises.

Iran’s foreign minister also conveyed appreciation to Pakistan’s prime minister, government and people for what he described as Islamabad’s principled stance, the statement added.