Pakistan inaugurates upgraded mineral research labs to boost foreign investment in mining

Pakistan Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif (left) and COAS General Asim Munir (second left) inaugurate upgraded Geoscience Advanced Research Laboratories (GARL) in Islamabad on October 17, 2025. (Government of Pakistan)
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Updated 17 October 2025
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Pakistan inaugurates upgraded mineral research labs to boost foreign investment in mining

  • Upgraded facility in Islamabad is expected to enhance Pakistan’s mineral research capabilities
  • It aims to produce reliable, globally recognized mineral data to support large-scale projects

KARACHI: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif on Friday inaugurated the upgraded Geoscience Advanced Research Laboratories (GARL) in Islamabad, a move intended to augment the country’s mineral research capability amid the government’s push for foreign investment in the area, according to an official statement.

Mining and minerals have emerged as priority sectors for Pakistan as the government seeks to attract international companies to invest in resource extraction under its broader strategy of shifting toward export-led growth.

The sectors gained institutional prominence with the establishment of the Special Investment Facilitation Council (SIFC) — a hybrid civil-military body created to streamline investment and support foreign businesses interested in key industries — in June 2023.

The recent surge of international interest in Reko Diq, one of the world’s largest undeveloped copper and gold deposits located in Pakistan’s southwest, reflects this renewed focus.

“Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif inaugurated the upgraded Geoscience Advanced Research Laboratories (GARL) of the Geological Survey of Pakistan on Friday,” Sharif’s office said in a statement circulated after the ceremony.

“The event marked a significant enhancement of the country’s mineral research capabilities, drawing high-level attention to the development of Pakistan’s mineral sector,” it added.

According to the statement, the facility was originally established in 1991 and has undergone extensive modernization and now holds ISO/IEC 17025 accreditation.

The upgrade allows the laboratory to produce analytical data that meets international reporting standards, critical for mining companies and investors to estimate reserves and verify mineral potential.

Officials from the Geological Survey of Pakistan said the modernization and accreditation are aimed at bolstering investor confidence by providing credible, verifiable data to support large-scale projects.

They described the facility as a state-of-the-art hub for the mineral sector’s development, designed to meet the evolving demands of exploration and research.

The upgraded laboratories are also expected to support Pakistan’s efforts in rare earth elements, whose deposits have been identified in various geological zones across the country though exploration remains at an early stage.

Pakistan has already attracted American interest in the area, with media reports indicating that US Strategic Metals dispatched a first consignment of Pakistani mineral samples to the United States this month, including antimony, copper concentrate and rare earth elements such as neodymium and praseodymium.

Pakistan is believed to hold untapped mineral reserves valued at some $6 trillion, including copper, gold, lithium, coal, rock salt, and iron ore. Despite this, the mineral sector currently contributes only about 3.2 percent to the country’s GDP, and mineral exports account for less than 0.1 percent of the global trade in those commodities.


Pakistan says defense pact with Saudi Arabia elevated brotherly ties to ‘new heights’

Updated 25 February 2026
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Pakistan says defense pact with Saudi Arabia elevated brotherly ties to ‘new heights’

  • Pakistan, Saudi Arabia signed strategic defense pact last year pledging aggression against one will be treated as attack on both
  • Deputy PM Ishaq Dar says enduring bonds with Islamic and Arab nations form vital pillar of Pakistan’s foreign policy 

ISLAMABAD: Deputy Prime Minister Ishaq Dar said on Wednesday that Pakistan’s defense pact with Saudi Arabia elevated its brotherly ties with the Kingdom to “new heights,” stressing that close ties with Arab and Islamic nations form a key pillar of Islamabad’s foreign policy. 

Pakistan and Saudi Arabia signed a Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement on Sept. 17 last year, pledging that aggression against one country would be treated as an attack on both, enhancing joint deterrence and formalizing decades of military and security cooperation.

Both nations agreed in October 2025 to launch an economic cooperation framework to strengthen trade and investment ties. 

“In the Middle East, our landmark Strategic Mutual Defense Agreement with Saudi Arabia has elevated our brotherly ties to new heights,” Dar said while speaking at the Pakistan Governance Forum 2026 event in Islamabad. 

The Pakistani deputy prime minister was speaking on the topic “Navigating International Relations Amidst Changing Geo-Politics.”

Dar noted that Pakistan has reinforced partnerships with other Middle Eastern nations such as the UAE, Qatar, Jordan, Oman, Egypt and Bahrain. He said these partnerships have yielded “concrete agreements” in investment, agriculture, infrastructure, and energy sectors. 

“Our enduring bonds with Islamic and Arab nations form a vital pillar of our foreign policy, and we will continue to expand our partnerships across Asia, Latin America, and Africa,” he said. 

Dar pointed out that the presidents of Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan have undertaken visits to Pakistan in recent months, reflecting Central Asian nations’ desire to boost cooperation with Islamabad.

On South Asia, the Pakistani deputy PM said Pakistan has successfully transformed its fraternal ties with Bangladesh into “a substantive partnership.”

“Similarly, the trilateral mechanism involving China, Pakistan, and Bangladesh has been launched with a view to expanding and deepening regional cooperation and synergy,” the Pakistani minister said. 

He said Islamabad has strengthened its “all-weather” partnership with China via the second phase of the multi-billion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor agreement and “unwavering support” from both sides for each other’s core interests. 

Dar said Pakistan had also reinvigorated its partnership with the US, advancing cooperation in trade, technology, investment, and regional stability. 

“This calibrated approach has enhanced our ability to navigate complexity with skill and confidence, ensuring that our national interests are served without compromising our core foreign policy principles,” he said.