Author: admin

  • Reko Diq project set to get $3.5b loan

    Reko Diq project set to get $3.5b loan

    Pakistan has already chalked out a $1.9 billion funding plan to execute the Reko Diq copper and gold mining project. Total project funding has been estimated at $4.297 billion. Photo: File


    ISLAMABAD:

    Petroleum Minister Ali Pervaiz Malik said on Thursday that the Reko Diq Mining Company was very near to achieve financial close with $3.5 billion loans lined up, as the company’s local executive vowed to complete the $7 billion first phase of the project in the next three years.

    The Reko Diq Mining Company is very close to achieving the financial close and raising $3.5 billion in debt, said Malik while speaking about prospects of Pakistan’s mining sector during a seminar organised by the Pakistan Business Council (PBC).

    The minister’s statement came days after the US Export-Import (Exim) Bank board approved a $1.25 billion loan for the Reko Diq mine, as part of the US Congress’s larger plan to invest $100 billion to secure global mineral supplies.

    The total cost of the project is estimated at $7.7 billion, which includes $3.5 billion in debt from 11 international banks and organisations.

    Zarar Jamali, Country Manager of Reko Diq Mining Company, said that the $3.5 billion financing has been secured from 11 banks, including Japan, Canada and the United States. Jamali said that the first export shipment is targeted for the first quarter of 2029.

    There have been high hopes that Reko Diq miners can solve Pakistan’s external sector problems. But the petroleum minister watered down claims of $7 trillion worth of mineral reserves in Pakistan, saying that “$7 trillion is a presumed value, as it neither has been measured nor calculated”. He cautioned against attaching so many hopes to the $7 trillion figure and said that it takes about a decade to complete one mining project.

    Malik said that the government spent the past year standardising the legal, regulatory and safety regulations in the light of feedback received from foreign investors.

    Pakistan has already revised upwards the cost of the first phase of the Reko Diq copper and gold mines project for the second time in six months. The cost has now jumped 79% to $7.7 billion from the initial estimate due to the higher cost of loans being taken for the project and to offset any future price shocks.

    Zarar Jamali said that the first phase of construction at Reko Diq mines is going on with an estimated investment of $5.5 billion to $6 billion.

    While commenting on the Barrick Company split, Jamali said that Barrick has not performed as well as other mining companies. “Barrick has given a statement that it would stay here. We have secured the financing and we are going ahead with the project,” said the local executive.

    Barrick’s board has recently raised the possibility of splitting the company into two entities: one focused on North American assets and the other on assets in Africa and Asia.

    Barrick’s interim chief executive officer also recently stated that the company remained committed to its Reko Diq copper project in Pakistan.

    Muhammad Ali Tabba of the Lucky Group emphasised the need to set up smelting plants of copper and gold in Pakistan, brushing aside the perception that these facilities were unviable. He spoke against exporting raw materials and called for exporting only refined value-added products.

    Millions of tonnes of raw material should not be exported, which will be more hazardous and involve security concerns too, said Tabba.

    Ali Pervaiz Malik said that to run a smelter on a sustainable basis, there is a need for continued supplies of raw material.

    Pakistan is on the verge of operationalising two mining projects – about $8 billion worth of Reko Diq and over $1.5 billion worth of Siadiq project, said Shamsuddin Sheikh, Chief Executive Officer of National Resources Limited. He said that both of these projects are expected to begin operations before the end of 2030.

    Col Hamid Ashraf, Adviser to the Geological Survey of Pakistan, said that there was a need to give fiscal incentives for mining to tap the $7 trillion reserves and set a better internal rate of return on investment.

    The petroleum minister said that it would be difficult to give fiscal incentives under the IMF programme. In her closing remarks, Dr Zeelaf Munir, Chairperson PBC, stated, “Pakistan’s economic future depends on resilience, reform and responsible partnership. No institution can deliver progress alone; all the stakeholders need to believe in business.”

    Continue Reading

  • Kiefer Sutherland gets a Christmas glow up in 'Tinsel Town' – Reuters

    1. Kiefer Sutherland gets a Christmas glow up in ‘Tinsel Town’  Reuters
    2. ‘Tinsel Town’ Review: Kiefer Sutherland Leads a Great British Holiday Tradition in This Meta Comedy  Collider
    3. Frazer Theatre to host exclusive early screening of Christmas…

    Continue Reading

  • Management of Severe Riga-Fede Disease in a Child With MIRAGE Syndrome

    Management of Severe Riga-Fede Disease in a Child With MIRAGE Syndrome

    Continue Reading

  • Almost everything about NASA’s latest mission to Mars is unusual

    Almost everything about NASA’s latest mission to Mars is unusual

    NASA’s latest robotic mission to Mars, ESCAPADE, should perhaps have been named the Great Escape, given how many times it has eluded doom.

    The data that the mission eventually collects will provide clues about why Mars, which once possessed…

    Continue Reading

  • Trump says one National Guard soldier shot near White House has died | Donald Trump News

    Trump says one National Guard soldier shot near White House has died | Donald Trump News

    BREAKING,

    US president says second National Guard member is ‘fighting for his life’ after the attack a day earlier in Washington, DC.

    United States…

    Continue Reading

  • SIFC urges overhaul of tax regime, interest rates, exchange-rate policy

    SIFC urges overhaul of tax regime, interest rates, exchange-rate policy

    Warns excessive taxes, high rates hurt investment, calling for export-driven strategy instead

    View of business offices and under construction residential apartments in Karachi, Pakistan September 23, 2025 Photo: Reuters

    Continue Reading

  • National Guard member dies after shooting in Washington DC

    National Guard member dies after shooting in Washington DC

    One of the two members of the National Guard that were shot in Washington DC on Wednesday has died, US President Donald Trump said.

    Sarah Beckstrom, 20, died from her injuries, President Trump said on Thursday.

    The second National Guard member…

    Continue Reading

  • The 72 Best Black Friday Deals Worth Shopping Today

    The 72 Best Black Friday Deals Worth Shopping Today

    Black Friday is here. Today is your chance to save big on products you’ve been waiting all year to buy. Whether you use it to replace your old running shoes, stock up on creatine or finally upgrade your wearable tech, we’re here to signpost you…

    Continue Reading

  • Asia-Pacific stocks set for softer open as Tokyo inflation runs hotter than expected

    Asia-Pacific stocks set for softer open as Tokyo inflation runs hotter than expected

    Pedestrians walking across a crowded traffic at Shibuya crossing square in Tokyo, Japan.

    Jaczhou | E+ | Getty Images

    Asia-Pacific markets are set to open slightly lower on Friday as U.S. stock futures remained flat over Thanksgiving Day, with the Nasdaq Composite on track to end a seven-month winning streak.

    Traders in Asia will assess key economic data from across the region, including inflation data from Tokyo, a leading indicator of where national inflation is heading. Investors will also watch India’s GDP for its fiscal second quarter, ending September, later on Friday.

    Headline inflation in Tokyo for October dipped slightly to 2.7% from 2.8% the month before, while core inflation came in at 2.8%, slightly higher than the 2.7% expected by economists polled by Reuters. Core inflation in Japan strips out prices of fresh food but includes energy prices.

    Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 started the day down 0.18%.

    Japan’s Nikkei 225 futures pointed to a marginally weaker open for the market, with the futures contract in Chicago at 50,160 and its counterpart in Osaka at 50,080 compared to the previous close of 50,167.1

    Hong Kong Hang Seng index futures were at 25,935, lower than the HSI’s last close of 25,945.93.

    Overnight in the U.S., all three major indexes were little changed. Dow Jones Industrial Average futures rose just 10 points. S&P 500 futures and Nasdaq-100 futures traded just above the flatline.

    Stocks are on pace for a losing month when trading resumes on Friday. A pullback in tech stocks has weighed on the major averages in November, as doubt swirled around the future profitability of AI companies.

    Yet some investors are hopeful that this month’s slide will signal a year-end rally for the major averages, as they step in to buy stocks that have been unduly punished at more attractive valuations.

    U.S. markets were closed Thursday for Thanksgiving Day. The stock market will close early at 1 p.m. ET on Friday.

    — CNBC’s Sean Conlon and Pia Singh contributed to this report.

    Continue Reading

  • Use of Virtual Technology in Teaching Human Anatomy in Medical Schools: A Systematic Review

    Use of Virtual Technology in Teaching Human Anatomy in Medical Schools: A Systematic Review

    Continue Reading