Pakistan seeks Australia partnership as it courts foreign investment in vast mineral sector

Pakistan’s Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik (right) in coversation with Australian High Commissioner in Pakistan, Timothy Kane in Islamabad, Pakistan, on January 27, 2026. (PID)
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Updated 28 January 2026
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Pakistan seeks Australia partnership as it courts foreign investment in vast mineral sector

  • Islamabad wants intergovernmental agreement to attract long-term Australian investment
  • Government seeks to formalize gemstones sector to boost exports, jobs and value addition

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan proposed an intergovernmental agreement with Australia to support structured, long-term cooperation in the mining sector, as Islamabad looks to attract investment and develop its mineral resources, according to an official statement on Tuesday.

The issue came up for discussion during a meeting between Pakistan’s Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik and the new Australian High Commissioner Timothy Kane. The meeting focused on exploring avenues for enhanced bilateral cooperation, particularly in the mining and gemstones sectors.

Pakistan has positioned mining as a potential engine of long-term growth, following years of underinvestment and stalled projects, and as resource-rich Asian economies increasingly look overseas to secure supplies of critical minerals and diversify investment portfolios.

“The Federal Minister welcomed the strong interest of Australian companies in Pakistan’s mining sector and highlighted the country’s immense untapped mineral potential, particularly in the Tethyan Belt,” the statement said.

“He proposed the possibility of an Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA) between Pakistan and Australia to promote structured and long term cooperation in the mining sector,” it added.

The minister also highlighted the government’s efforts to develop and formalize the gemstones sector, emphasizing its potential for value addition, exports, and employment generation.

The Australian high commissioner said companies from his country were already involved in Pakistan’s Reko Diq copper and gold project while pointing out that additional firms had expressed interest in investing in Pakistan’s mining sector.

He also informed that Australia was open to cooperation in the gemstones sector through technical assistance, training and knowledge-sharing, noting the growing strategic importance of minerals for the global energy transition.


Pakistan weekly inflation rises 5.19% year on year as Ramadan begins

Updated 21 February 2026
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Pakistan weekly inflation rises 5.19% year on year as Ramadan begins

  • Out of 51 items, prices of 17 items increased, 12 items decreased and 22 remained stable
  • The Sensitive Price Index for the week ending on Feb. 19 increased by 1.16 percent, data shows

KARACHI: Short-term inflation, measured by the Sensitive Price Index (SPI), rose 5.19 percent year-on-year in the week ending Feb 19, the statistics bureau said on Friday, reflecting higher prices of perishable food items at the start of Ramadan.

The SPI, which comprises 51 essential items collected from 50 markets in 17 cities, is computed on a weekly basis to assess the price movement of essential commodities at a shorter interval of time to review the price situation in the country.

The SPI for the week ending on Feb. 19 increased by 1.16 percent, the year-on-year trend depicted an increase of 5.19 percent, according to the Pakistan Bureau of Statistics (PBS) data.

The development came as the holy fasting month of Ramadan began in the South Asian country on Feb. 19, which often sees an increase of prices of fruit, vegetables and other necessary items.

“During the week, out of 51 items, prices of 17 (33.33%) items increased, 12 (23.53%) items decreased and 22 (43.14%) items remained stable,” the PBS said.

Major increase was observed in the prices of Bananas (16.05%), Electricity Charges for Q1 (15.41%), Garlic (5.86%), Chicken (5.49%), Onions (3.83%), Tomatoes (3.82%), Diesel (2.69%), Petrol (1.93%), Beef (1.03%), LPG (0.75%), Mutton (0.69%) and Long Cloth (0.28%), according to the PBS.

The items whose prices decreased included Eggs (11.78%), Potatoes (2.24%), Wheat Flour (2.02%), Pulse Masoor (1.47%), Sugar (0.96%), Vegetable Ghee 2.5Kg (0.72%), Pulse Gram (0.58%), Cooking Oil 5 Litre (0.19%), Gur (0.16%), Vegetable Ghee 1Kg (0.11%), Rice (0.08%) and Mustard Oil (0.07%).