ABIDJAN, June 24 (Reuters) - Burkina Faso's gold output is
expected to rise 25 percent to 40 tonnes a year by 2016 as three
new mines go into production next year, mines and energy
minister Salif Kabore said on Tuesday.
Gold has leapfrogged cotton to become the landlocked west
African nation's main export since 2009 and now accounts for
roughly 20 percent of GDP.
"We are on track to increase gold production from September
2015. Three new mines will reach the production stage and we
think we will hit our 40 tonnes target in two years," Kabore
said in the sideline of a regional mines meeting in the Ivorian
capital Abidjan.
The new gold mines belong to TrueGold TGM.V , Gryphone
GRY.AX and Roxgold ROG.V , Kabore said.
Toronto-listed IAMGOLD IMG.TO and Semafo SMF.TO are the
other miners currently producing gold in the west African
nation.
Burkina Faso produced some 32 tonnes of gold last year from
its seven gold mines but it is aiming to reorganise its
small-scale gold mining industry to increase the potential of
the sector, Kabore said.
"Burkina Faso is positioning itself as a mining destination.
We are on track to keep on producing gold for the next two
decades and in five years we will have 15 mines in operation,"
he said.
(Reporting By Loucoumane Coulibaly; writing by Bate Felix;
editing by Keiron Henderson)
((bate.felix@thomsonreuters.com)(+221 33 864 5077)(Reuters
Messaging: Reuters Messaging:
bate.felix.reuters.com@reuters.net))
Keywords: GOLD BURKINA/OUTPUT