The Fourth Annual Sudan International Mining Forum and Exhibition
opened on Monday in capital Khartoum, with more than 40 countries in
participation.
“This forum is
convened under very complicated regional and international
circumstances,” said Sudan’s Prime Minister Mutaz Musa, when addressing
the forum’s opening session.
The
current challenges need efforts to enhance partnerships in mining
field, create an appropriate atmosphere and provide the required
infrastructures, he noted.
Musa further reiterated Sudan’s commitment to opening the doors for people willing to invest in Sudan’s mineral fields.
Sudan’s Minister of Petroleum and Minerals Azhari Abdelgadir Abdullah
reiterated his country’s keenness to provide investment opportunities
and double the production.
He
explained that around 460 mining companies were operating in Sudan,
saying that the traditional mining is considered the biggest sector as
it employs nearly two million people.
The forum, convened during Feb. 18-20, is scheduled to discuss mining issues presented by Sudanese and foreign scholars.
Sudan is seeking to make gold a major source of foreign currency after
losing three quarters of its oil revenues due to the separation of
South Sudan in 2011.
In 2018, Sudan produced more than 110 tons of gold and it works to rank first in gold production in Africa.