ADB to provide $410 million package for Barrick-run Pakistan mine, sources say

he hills near the proposed site of the Reko Diq copper mine in Pakistan's province of Baluchistan are seen in this undated 2010 photo. (REUTERS/File)
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Updated 21 August 2025
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ADB to provide $410 million package for Barrick-run Pakistan mine, sources say

  • Reko Diq mine is expected to produce copper, gold from 2028 and generate about $70 billion in free cash flow over its lifespan
  • Financing composed of two loans totaling $300 million to Barrick, a $110 million financing guarantee for Pakistan’s government

ISLAMABAD: The Asian Development Bank will provide a $410 million financing package to help develop Pakistan’s Reko Diq copper mine, one of the world’s largest untapped deposits, which will be operated by Barrick Gold, two sources told Reuters on Thursday.

Islamabad hopes the project will serve as a springboard to draw more foreign interest to its mineral sector, particularly to exploit rare earth deposits. Pakistan has already attracted interest from the Trump administration and offered future concessions to US companies.

The loans and a financing guarantee will support development of Reko Diq, which is expected to produce copper and gold from 2028 and generate about $70 billion in free cash flow over its lifespan.

The financing is composed of two loans totaling $300 million to Barrick and a $110 million financing guarantee for the government of Pakistan, both sources said ahead of the official announcement.

The $6.6 billion project in Balochistan is 50 percent owned by Barrick, with the other half held by the federal and provincial governments.

ADB, the petroleum ministry and Barrick did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

The project aims to raise upwards of $2 billion and has a previous agreement for $700 million in financing from the International Finance Corporation, the World Bank’s private investment arm.

The project’s developers are in talks with other prospective financiers, including the US Export-Import Bank, Export Development Canada and Japan’s JBIC and expect to sign term sheets this quarter, project director Tim Cribb told Reuters in April.

Reko Diq, delayed for years by a legal dispute that was settled in 2022, will produce 200,000 metric tons of copper annually in its first phase, rising to 400,000 tons after an expansion.

Barrick says the mine could operate beyond its 37-year life through upgrades and further exploration.


Punjab committee clears kite-flying ordinance, assembly approval expected next session

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Punjab committee clears kite-flying ordinance, assembly approval expected next session

  • The ordinance sets strict registration requirements for kite makers and sellers, bans chemically coated strings
  • Police of sub-inspector rank and above have been allowed to search premises and make arrests without warrants

ISLAMABAD: The Punjab Assembly Standing Committee on Home Affairs on Monday approved a new ordinance regulating kite flying, setting the stage for lawmakers to endorse the measure in the next assembly session as the provincial government moves toward reviving the Basant festival after a 25-year ban.

The Punjab Regulation of Kite Flying Ordinance 2025 has already received approval from the governor, with the provincial administration announcing earlier this month it would allow Basant to be held from Feb. 6-8.

The festival once drew thousands to rooftops across Lahore and other cities in the province, but from 2005 onwards authorities repeatedly prohibited kite flying after dozens of people, many of them children, were killed or injured by metal and chemically coated strings that slashed motorcyclists and pedestrians.

“It is necessary to provide for regulation of kite flying in Punjab in order to save human life, public and private property and matters connected therewith,” the ordinance said.

Under the ordinance, kite makers, sellers and kite-flying associations must register with the deputy commissioner, and kite flying may only be permitted in districts where the government issues a formal notification.

District authorities may allow kite flying only with prior approval from the provincial government, the text said.

The ordinance also imposes up to five years’ imprisonment and fines of up to 2 million rupees ($7,200) for manufacturing, transporting or selling prohibited kite strings, including metallic wire, nylon cord (tandi) or chemically coated sharp string.

Unregistered kite production or sale carries penalties of up to five years in prison and fines of up to Rs500,000 ($1,800).

Offences under the ordinance are cognizable and non-bailable.

“A police officer not below the rank of sub-inspector may, upon receiving information regarding prohibited kite material, conduct a search or make an arrest without warrant,” the ordinance said.

The ordinance repeals the Punjab Prohibition of Kite Flying Ordinance 2001 and is expected to be presented to the provincial assembly for formal approval when it reconvenes, officials said.