Skip to main content
Open this photo in gallery:

North Mara Acacia has been operating mines in Tanzania for over 15 years.Supplied

Barrick Gold Corp. has reached a new agreement with Tanzania that may finally end a punishing multiyear gold-export ban at its subsidiary Acacia Mining PLC that has weighed heavily on the share prices of both companies.

The development comes about six weeks after skilled African operator Mark Bristow took over as the new chief executive officer of Toronto-based Barrick.

The latest proposal would see Acacia split “economic benefits,” including taxes and royalties from its Tanzanian mines, 50/50 with the East African country. Acacia would also pay Tanzania US$300-million to resolve a long-running tax dispute. While the agreement is similar to one announced in late 2017, the tax penalty can be paid over time, instead up front. Barrick says it will present a proposal to Acacia in the “near future.”

Unusually, Barrick, which owns 63.9 per cent of London-based Acacia, has been negotiating with the Tanzanian government on its behalf. Acacia’s management team was locked out of discussions partly because of its poor relationship with Tanzania.

“Significant amounts of real value have been destroyed by this dispute,” Mr. Bristow said in a statement on Wednesday.

“This proposal will allow the business to focus on rebuilding its mining operations in partnership with their respective stakeholders, and, most importantly, long-suffering investors, including Barrick.”

In a statement on Wednesday, Acacia said that an independent committee of its board of directors must review any proposal. A shareholder vote at Acacia must also take place before the agreement could take effect and the Tanzanian government would have to give its stamp of approval.

“Whilst crunching the numbers on all of this is hard to do right now, if it allows operations to return to normal it could be a net positive for Acacia,” RBC Dominion Securities analyst James Bell wrote in a note to clients.

Shares in Barrick, which owns 63.9 per cent of Acacia, rose by just more than 1 per cent on the Toronto Stock Exchange on Wednesday, while Acacia’s stock shot up by 12.8 per cent on the London Stock Exchange, the biggest increase in 16 months.

After Barrick’s US$6-billion acquisition of Randgold Resources Ltd. was announced in September, there was hope that Mr. Bristow, who joined the company as CEO, might be able to end the Acacia impasse considering his long history of operating successfully in Africa.

Over the past few years, a number African countries including Democratic Republic of the Congo and Zambia have introduced punitive tax measures that have driven up the cost of doing business abroad for Canadian miners.

The Acacia tax fracas can be traced back to the election in 2015 of Tanzanian President John Magufuli who promised to go after a bigger share of the mineral wealth. Tanzania historically had a relatively light tax code in place for Western miners. In 2017, Mr. Magufuli zeroed in on Acacia, accusing the company of US$200-billion in tax fraud and rolling out a crippling gold-concentrate export ban. While Acacia maintains it has paid a significant amount in taxes to Tanzania over time, both Mr. Bristow and Barrick’s executive chairman John Thornton have argued it needs to pay more.

“Despite all the promises, [Acacia] hasn’t delivered real taxable profits," Mr. Bristow said in an interview last week.

He also said that a 50/50 split in the economics between Tanzania and Acacia is “reasonable” when compared with current tax rates imposed by other African countries on Western miners.

After reaching a tentative agreement in October, 2017, talks between Barrick and Tanzania hit a stalemate, with neither side revealing what had gone wrong. Late last year, relations between Acacia and Tanzania deteriorated further with criminal money-laundering charges laid against three employees and one ex-employee. Three of the individuals are still being detained in Tanzania under non-bailable offences. Mr. Bristow characterized the situation as “a product of the fallout of the relationship between Acacia and the government.”

Report an editorial error

Report a technical issue

Editorial code of conduct

Tickers mentioned in this story

Study and track financial data on any traded entity: click to open the full quote page. Data updated as of 14/11/24 4:00pm EST.

SymbolName% changeLast
ABX-T
Barrick Gold Corp
+0.81%23.72

Follow related authors and topics

Authors and topics you follow will be added to your personal news feed in Following.

Interact with The Globe