Australia’s MCA welcomes gold report

18th May 2018 By: Esmarie Iannucci - Creamer Media Senior Deputy Editor: Australasia

Australia’s MCA welcomes gold report

Photo by: Bloomberg

PERTH (miningweekly.com) – The Minerals Council of Australia (MCA) has welcomed a new report by the World Gold Council (WGC), which states that gold will continue to be valued over the next 30 years, with new uses for gold meaning new opportunities for producers.

“New uses for gold including in antibiotics, smartphones and electric vehicles will bring new opportunities over the next three decades for gold companies in Australia, the world’s second-largest gold producer and largest exporter,” said MCA interim CEO David Byers on Friday.

Key findings of the report include that the rapidly expanding middle class will increase demand for gold, that technology is an increasingly important sector for gold, and that the industry may struggle to reach and/or maintain current production levels in the next 30 years.

The report notes that world gold demand has soared in the past 30 years, owing to significant growth in emerging economies, particularly China and India, and that growth has not just been limited to gold’s traditional role as an investment asset or for use in jewellery, but that the metal is increasingly being used as a component in modern consumer electronics products such as smartphones and in the circuitry of electric vehicles.

Gold compounds are reportedly also “showing promise as a new class of antibiotic in early-phase clinical studies. It is conceivable that gold-containing drugs will form part of our defence against infection by 2048”.

“These new applications for gold combined with traditional investment demand in growing economies presents a significant opportunity for Australian gold mining companies to play a major role in future global supply chains,” Byers said.

“However, this opportunity is far from guaranteed, with the report listing a range of production challenges: "discoveries have been scant; permitting timelines are long; capital costs have ballooned; environmental, social and governance requirements are becoming more challenging; operating costs have risen; and political risk has increased’.”

Byers said that these factors handicapped the capacity of Australian gold producers in their efforts to develop new mines and sustain existing operations.

He added that the recent risk of increased gold royalties in Western Australian and the Northern Territory also showed a short-sighted approach to encouraging a world-class Australian industry at a time when production costs were growing.

“Australia has already missed an opportunity in the past decade. The report shows much of the recent growth in global gold demand has been supplied from new emerging gold regions and mines in other parts of the world.

“Both federal and state governments must support Australian gold miners with stable royalty and tax systems, sound environmental regulation and a commitment to exploration programmes if Australia is to make the most of the next phase of technology-led growth in gold demand.”