Saudi Arabia claims its mining deposits could be valued at $2.5 trillion, with gold, copper, and Rare Earth Elements in its reserves, CNN and S&P Global reported.
While the main Saudi deposits include gold, zinc, copper, and lithium, there are also rare-earth deposits of dysprosium, terbium, neodymium, and praseodymium, which are key to high-tech sectors like electric vehicles, wind turbines, and high-speed computers.
“The reality is mining is a really long game. It takes three to five years to build a processing plant. It can take up to 29 years in some jurisdictions,” Hunter told CNN.
The mining project also appears to be part of Saudi Arabia’s diversification objective under Vision 2030, which aims to diversify the country’s resources away from reliance on oil reserves and exports.
In the mining sector, even though it’s still far behind the oil sector, the Saudis have approximately 40 years of reserves in gold and copper deposits, according to a S&P Global survey.
Saudi Arabia’s investments in global mining projects
The project would be centered on supplying the United States defense sector, with the remaining 75% already pre-sold to American and European investors for refining.
The objective would be to transform the company, a joint venture of the Saudi Arabian Mining Company (Maaden) and the Public Investment Fund (PIF), which oversees projects related to Vision 2030.
https://www.jpost.com/business-and-innovation/precious-metals/article-884598

