Regional Production:
As far as the Great Lakes Region is concerned, gold is the most significant of all “conflict minerals”, both in terms of value, local employment, and actual DRC conflict risks. Currently (2014), 4 out of 5 artisanal miners in the eastern DRC are engaged in gold mining, and more than half of the associated mines are militarized. Artisanal gold rushes and the associated community problems arising from unregulated migration are common in the DRC and elsewhere.
In nature, gold commonly occurs as native metal (Au) or forms alloys with other metals, especially with silver (electrum). Unlike the 3T minerals (which are usually concentrated by gravity processing only), gold is concentrated by artisanal miners and traders through both gravity and chemical processing (e.g., amalgamation or cyanide leaching) creating significantly elevated health and environmental risks.
Local prices offered by gold traders are either quoted per gram or per tola (1 tola = 11.4 grams). Diggers typically receive ca. 1/3 and up to 1/2 of that price. Supply chain networks are significantly more complex than those of 3T minerals and often involve pre-financing arrangements among several tiers.
Gold dust or doré bars exported from the Great Lakes Region typically have a purity of 90-95% Au. Although gold prices have declined significantly since their peak in 2011, one kilogram of gold exported from the region is still worth US$ 30-35,000.
Global Market Environment:
Internationally, gold is traded on several international exchange platforms, e.g. the Shanghai Gold Exchange or the London Metal Exchange and a public price is quoted in US$ per ounce (1 ounce = 31.1 grams).
Africa is richly endowed with gold resources and significant production derives from West Africa (e.g., Burkina Faso, Ghana), South Africa, and Central-East Africa (e.g., Sudan, Tanzania, DRC). Gold production from the region – both industrial and artisanal – corresponds to ca. 4% of global mine supply. At a collective value of several billion US$ gold forms one of the most important export products of the region, even though the region’s output is small in comparison to the global top producers of gold (China, Australia, Russia and the US).
While industrial gold supply chains are usually well-controlled, artisanal gold from the Great Lakes Region is mostly smuggled between different countries and then out of the region altogether. BGR recently commissioned a research study estimating that annual ASM gold production in the Great Lakes Region alone is already worth more than US$ 1 billion. Most of this is smuggled out of the region and into the United Arab Emirates (Dubai), with associated collective revenue losses of more than US$ 20 million p.a. for the region as a whole.
Today gold is principally used as a monetary metal (investment) and in jewelry (with half of global end user demand coming from India and China). Minor industrial applications for gold are in the electronics sector (even though quantities are small, the value of gold contained in a mobile phone may in some cases exceed the value of tantalum) and dentistry.