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招金矿业瞄准西非金矿资产,西方矿商退出项目

Chinese miner hunts West Africa gold assets as Western firms exit projects - Business Insider Africa

2026年5月13日 15:00
出海解读

西方矿企正剥离西非金矿资产,为中国公司提供并购窗口;招金矿业已明确瞄准加纳、科特迪瓦等成熟矿区,具备海外运营经验的矿企可重点关注此类非核心资产出售机会。

AI 摘要

中国招金矿业正加速全球收购,目标涵盖非洲、中亚和亚太地区的金矿资产,西非的科特迪瓦、加纳和几内亚是其优先目的地。其首席投资官表示,该公司重点关注西方矿商在政治稳定司法管辖区剥离的资产,行业整合正带来持续的交易流,一些公司正在剥离非核心资产。

原文正文

Chinese firms are increasingly targeting West African assets, positioning themselves to acquire operations being sold off by international miners as the sector undergoes consolidation and strategic restructuring.

China’s Zhaojin Mining Industry is accelerating its global acquisition drive, targeting gold mine assets across Africa, Central Asia and the Asia Pacific, with West African countries including Côte d’Ivoire, Ghana and Guinea among its preferred destinations.

The company’s chief investment officer, Xu Jianzhuo, told Bloomberg News that Zhaojin is particularly focused on assets being shed by Western miners operating in politically stable jurisdictions.

He noted that ongoing consolidation in the sector is creating steady deal flow, as some companies divest non-core assets following earlier mergers and acquisitions.

“Gold M&As are very active at the moment,” Xu said. “The trend will only become stronger. Even under such high gold prices, we still see deals being carried out to boost scale.”

Western retreat opens space for Chinese expansion

A growing number of Western mining companies are reassessing their exposure to African gold operations, citing rising operating costs, tougher regulatory environments and heightened geopolitical risk in some jurisdictions.

Firms such as Barrick Mining have faced prolonged disputes over taxes and mining rights in Mali, while others like Gold Fields have flagged inflation-driven cost pressures affecting margins.

In response, several miners are streamlining portfolios and focusing on lower-risk jurisdictions, accelerating asset sales across parts of Africa’s gold sector.

This gradual pullback has created opportunities for Chinese miners, who are increasingly stepping in to acquire existing operations rather than build new ones from scratch. The trend is reshaping ownership patterns across key African gold-producing regions.

Chinese mining firms have been active participants in the global M&A wave driven by record gold prices. Rival Zijin Mining, for example, recently acquired Allied Gold Corp, gaining assets in Mali, Côte d’Ivoire and Ethiopia.

Zhaojin itself made its first major overseas push in 2024 with the acquisition of assets in Côte d’Ivoire. Its Abujar mine is projected to produce 4–5 tonnes of gold this year, marking a key foothold in West Africa’s expanding gold belt.

Beyond gold, the company is also building a copper portfolio, with interest in smaller projects in Namibia and Botswana, though Xu cautioned that high capital costs require a measured investment approach.

As global miners recalibrate portfolios, Chinese firms are positioning themselves as increasingly dominant players in Africa’s evolving mining landscape.

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阅读原文africa.businessinsider.com
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