Barrick CEO Mark Bristow steps down raising questions over future of Pakistan’s Reko Diq project

Mark Bristow, CEO of Barrick Gold, speaks at the Investing in African Mining Indaba, in Cape Town, South Africa, February 3, 2025. (Reuters/File)
Short Url
Updated 29 September 2025
Follow

Barrick CEO Mark Bristow steps down raising questions over future of Pakistan’s Reko Diq project

  • Bristow indicated in May he would stay in his current role until 2028, a timeline that would have allowed him to oversee Reko Diq’s development
  • His biggest test came this year when Barrick’s mine in Mali, Africa was taken over by the military government over alleged non-payment of taxes

Barrick Mining appointed veteran executive Mark Hill as interim president and CEO on Monday following the sudden resignation of Mark Bristow, who led the Canadian miner for nearly seven years after its merger with Randgold Resources.

Bristow, who became CEO in 2019 when Barrick acquired Randgold, oversaw the integration of the two companies and steered the miner through a period of significant portfolio reshaping and debt reduction.

“Disappointed to see him leave, he has been a fine leader,” said Peter Letko, of the Letko Brosseau investment fund, one of Barrick’s shareholders.

Bristow indicated in May he would stay in his current role until 2028, a timeline that would have allowed him to oversee the development of the company’s Reko Diq copper and gold project in Pakistan.

The announcement was therefore “surprising,” analysts at Citi said in a note.

“One question is whether this will lead to bigger changes at Barrick,” they said. “A new CEO could bring a new strategy in Mali, at Reko Diq or for the portfolio.”

Hill, who will also continue to serve as group chief operating officer, takes charge immediately as the board begins a global search for a permanent chief executive with the help of an external firm, named by one source as Egon Zehnder.

The board has been looking at succession planning for some time, driven, according to one source with knowledge of the matter, by the business’s relative underperformance compared to competitors over the past five years.

Shares in Barrick, which owns 13 mining assets across Africa, Asia, Latin America, and North America, have lagged some rivals, rising by 37 percent since 2020 compared to a 110 percent climb in shares of fellow Canadian miner Agnico Eagle, with gold prices hitting record highs.

US-listed shares of Barrick were marginally higher in premarket trading on Monday.

MALI, REKO DIQ AMONG CHALLENGES FOR NEW CEO

The company will consider both internal and external candidates, the source said, adding it was not clear if Hill would put himself forward as permanent CEO.

Bristow’s last public appearance was earlier this month at the Denver Gold Conference, where he addressed a packed room of investors about Barrick’s future plans.

Known for his mercurial leadership style, his tenure at Barrick was focused on integrating tough assets that Barrick owned in some of the volatile regions of the world.

But his biggest test came this year when Barrick’s mine in Mali, one of its biggest gold assets in Africa, was taken over by the military government over alleged non-payment of taxes. Barrick had to write off $1 billion from its books over the dispute.

Resolving that dispute will be among the key challenges for Bristow’s successor, along with the development of Nevada gold project Fourmile and its integration with Nevada Gold Mines joint venture with Newmont, and work on Reko Diq, said Martin Pradier of Veritas Investment Research.


UK announces ‘major reset’ of Pakistan development partnership with new trade, climate, education initiatives

Updated 9 sec ago
Follow

UK announces ‘major reset’ of Pakistan development partnership with new trade, climate, education initiatives

  • UK commits to increased investment-led cooperation in climate, business regulation and higher education
  • London shifts from aid donor to investment-focused partner as bilateral trade crosses $7.3 billion

ISLAMABAD: The United Kingdom on Wednesday unveiled what it called a “major reset” in its development partnership with Pakistan, announcing new investment-focused cooperation, education programs and a bilateral climate compact during a visit by UK Minister for Development Jennifer Chapman.

The trip marks the first federal-level development dialogue between the two governments in eight years and reflects London’s shift from a traditional aid-donor role toward investment-based partnerships. The British government said the new approach aims to use UK expertise to help partner economies build capacity and unlock domestic growth.

Pakistan-UK trade has also reached a record high, crossing £5.5 billion ($7.3 billion) for the first time, with more than 200 British firms now active in Pakistan, an increase London says signals growing two-way commercial confidence.

“Pakistan is a crucial partner for the UK. We work together to tackle the drivers behind organized crime and illegal migration, keeping both our countries safer,” Chapman was quoted as saying in a statement by the British High Commission in Islamabad. 

“Our strong bilateral trading relationship brings jobs and growth to us both. And we’re working together to tackle climate change, a global threat.”

The minister and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Tuesday jointly launched a package of business regulatory reforms aimed at improving Pakistan’s investment climate and making it easier for UK firms to operate. Officials said the initiative supports Pakistan’s economic recovery agenda and creates new commercial avenues for British companies.

A second key announcement was the next phase of the Pak-UK Education Gateway, developed with the British Council and Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission. The expanded program will enable joint research between universities in both countries, support climate- and technology-focused academic collaboration, and introduce a startup fund to help commercialize research. The Gateway will also promote UK university courses delivered inside Pakistan, giving students access to British degrees without traveling abroad.

Accompanied by Pakistan’s Minister for Climate Change Dr. Musadik Malik, Chapman also launched a Green Compact, a framework for climate cooperation, green investment, environmental protection and joint work at global climate forums.

The UK emphasized it remains one of Pakistan’s largest development partners, citing ongoing work in education, health, climate resilience and anti-trafficking capacity building. 

During the visit to Pakistan, Chapman will meet communities benefiting from UK-supported climate programs, which London says helped 2.5 million Pakistanis adapt to climate impacts in the past year, and observe training of airport officers working to prevent human trafficking.

“We remain firm friends of Pakistan, including in times of crisis, as shown through our floods response,” Chapman said. “And we know to accelerate growth in both our countries, we must work together in partnership to tackle the problems we face.”