OUAGADOUGOU: A unit of Timis Mining Corp. that says it was forced to stop developing the world’s largest manganese deposit may seek as much as $4 billion (Dh14.69 billion) in damages from Burkina Faso because the suspension of mining will endanger its other projects in West Africa.

Pan African Minerals’ $1 billion Tambao project has been “completely suspended” since June 2015 and the company has fired almost all its workers, managing director Souleymane Mihin said in an interview Thursday in Burkina Faso’s capital, Ouagadougou. The company on December 2 petitioned the International Court of Arbitration in Paris to protect its permit from being withdrawn, he said.

“Since the new government was appointed, no one has ever come to speak with us,” Mihin said. “The court will have to resolve this.”

With estimated reserves of 100 million metric tons, Tambao is the largest manganese mine in the world, according to Timis Corp.

Parliamentary committee

Tambao was meant to generate revenue that could be invested elsewhere in the region. Profits from the mine would be used to fund the construction of a quay in Ivory Coast’s Abidjan port to ship manganese, building a railway from the Mont Klahohyo iron ore deposit in Ivory Coast to the port of San Pedro, and the development of a uranium mine in Niger, according to Pan African Minerals in a letter to the Burkina Faso government dated September 9.

The company managed to ship 2,000 metric tons of the mineral before an interim government appointed after the ouster of longtime leader Blaise Compaore told management to halt exports amid a review of the West African nation’s mining contracts. Two months later, in March 2015, the company was ordered to stop production.

After a presidential vote last year brought an elected government to power, a parliamentary committee of inquiry in October recommended that the company’s permit be withdrawn and given to a different company.

The parliamentary committee’s findings prompted Pan African Burkina to seek arbitration from the court, part of the International Chamber of Commerce, Mihin said. The parliamentary report “constitutes a risk of serious irreparable prejudice,” he said. “We went to the court to protect our licence.”

Burkina Faso’s mining minister Alfa Omar Dissa said December 7 that Timis shouldn’t go to court while the matter is under mediation by the Ouagadougou-based Center of Arbitration, Mediation and Conciliation.

Regional ambitions

The failure of Tambao could thwart the regional ambitions of Romanian billionaire Frank Timis, the owner of Timis Corp. Under the agreement, Pan African Minerals had committed to build a railroad from the Tambao area to the capital that would be part of a larger West African railway link built by French company Bollore SA. A Pan African Minerals’ mining project in Sierra Leone collapsed in March last year, leaving behind a trail of multimillion-dollar investor losses.

It’s the second time in a decade that the arbitration court of the International Chamber of Commerce has been asked to rule on the Tambao project. Tambao was the focus of an earlier rights dispute between Burkina Faso and Dubai-based Wadi al Rawda Investments LLC, which signed an exploitation agreement in 2007. After completing a feasibility study, the company accused the government of refusing to recognise its rights to the project and in 2011 took the matter to the court. The dispute was settled in 2013.

Pan African Minerals obtained the rights to the project in 2012, two years before Compaore fled the country amid mass protests against his 27-year rule. Protesters smashed equipment and set fire to vehicles at the mine in February 2015, accusing the company of having unlawfully obtained a permit to develop the deposit. There’s a stock of 40,000 metric tons of manganese that the company isn’t able to ship, according to Mihin.

— Bloomberg