Saudi Arabia Unveils Extensive Mineralized Belts for Exploration Firms

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources is inviting local and international companies to participate in the Exploration Licensing for launched mineralized belts (Reuters)
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources is inviting local and international companies to participate in the Exploration Licensing for launched mineralized belts (Reuters)
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Saudi Arabia Unveils Extensive Mineralized Belts for Exploration Firms

Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources is inviting local and international companies to participate in the Exploration Licensing for launched mineralized belts (Reuters)
Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources is inviting local and international companies to participate in the Exploration Licensing for launched mineralized belts (Reuters)

Saudi Arabia's Ministry of Industry and Mineral Resources has unveiled its largest mineralized belts to date, spanning 4.7 thousand square kilometers and including five new exploration licenses.
The Ministry is inviting major mining and exploration companies to participate in the current Exploration Licensing Rounds, aiming to unlock the extensive mineral wealth of these belts.
The Ministry’s spokesperson, Jarrah Al-Jarrah, emphasized that this initiative underscores Saudi Arabia’s commitment to strengthening its mining and minerals sector and creating investment opportunities.

The five available exploration licenses are part of the Ministry’s strategy to boost exploration investment and support Vision 2030 objectives, which aim to position mining as a key industry in the Kingdom.
These licenses cover significantly larger areas than previous rounds and are targeted at high-net-worth companies with developed base and precious metal mines.
Saudi Arabia is seeking investors capable of exploring and discovering large, tier-1 deposits within approximately 1,000 square kilometers of exploration licenses. The Kingdom’s infrastructure and competitive financing options make it well-positioned to develop new tier-1 sites.
The Ministry is inviting local and international companies to participate in the Exploration Licensing for the following mineralized belts:
- Jabal Sayid: Three exploration licenses covering 2,892 square kilometers. The belt contains copper, zinc, lead, gold, and silver.
- Al-Hajjar: Two exploration licenses at the Wadi Shwas VMS Belt, covering 1,896 square kilometers. This site holds deposits of gold, silver, copper, and zinc.
Al-Jarrah highlighted that Jabal Sayid and Al-Hajjar are the largest mineralized belt sites ever launched by the Kingdom.
The bidding process for the exploration licenses will be transparent and conducted in stages, beginning with pre-qualification from July to October 2024.
Qualified bidders will then submit technical proposals and social and environmental impact management plans by December 2024, with the winners announced and licenses granted in January 2025.



Economists Push Back on Harris Price Gouging Plan

 US Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as she steps off Air Force Two upon arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on August 23, 2024. (AFP)
US Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as she steps off Air Force Two upon arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on August 23, 2024. (AFP)
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Economists Push Back on Harris Price Gouging Plan

 US Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as she steps off Air Force Two upon arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on August 23, 2024. (AFP)
US Vice President and 2024 Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris as she steps off Air Force Two upon arrival at Joint Base Andrews, Maryland, on August 23, 2024. (AFP)

Kamala Harris's price gouging policy has been criticized by economists and analysts, who say it is an uncompetitive proposal that could end up hurting, and not helping, US consumers.

Harris, the Democratic nominee for president, announced the policy last week as part of a raft of populist proposals which included a $6,000-a-year tax credit for families with newborn children and a $10,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers.

If elected President, Harris would work with Congress to advance "the first-ever federal ban on price gouging on food and groceries," her campaign said in a statement.

The proposals would look to set "clear rules of the road" to stop big corporations from running up "excessive" profits on food and groceries, and beef up state and federal regulatory powers to penalize rule-breakers.

While popular with the Democratic base, the price gouging plans elicited a fierce reaction from Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump, who is running against Harris in November's elections.

"Kamala will implement SOVIET Style Price Controls," he wrote in a social media post a day after the proposals were published.

Supporters of the policy say it has been mischaracterized and misunderstood.

"When there is more concentration in an industry, we have seen much greater increases in the profit margins," US Senator Elizabeth Warren said in an interview with CNBC on Friday.

The Harris campaign did not respond to a request for comment. But several US media organizations, including the Washington Post, reported that the Harris campaign sees the policy as an attempt to elevate existing state-level rules on price gouging to the federal level.

- What price gouging? -

A global inflationary surge at the tail-end of the Covid-19 pandemic contributed to a sharp rise in the cost of everyday items across the United States.

Consumer inflation has eased dramatically since peaking at more than nine percent in 2022. But Americans are still contending with an overall price increase of just over 20 percent since Joe Biden took office, according to data from the US Labor Department.

However, "very little" of that increase is down to price gouging, Oxford Economics chief US economist Ryan Sweet told AFP.

Instead, Sweet points to a pandemic-fueled supply shock, and an increase in demand for goods and services spurred -- in part -- by generous federal support for households during the pandemic.

"What this gouging does is pivot the blame from the Biden administration, which Harris was part of, to corporations," said Gary Hufbauer, a nonresident senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics.

"It's a pretty successful political argument," he told AFP. "It has no economic basis."

- 'Penny business' -

The retail business is notoriously tough, with profit margins often in the low single digits -- in stark contrast to higher-margin sectors like tech.

"Is there a more competitive space than retail?" Target chief executive Brian Cornell said in an interview with CNBC on Wednesday that touched on Harris's price gouging plans.

"It is a penny business, and it's a very competitive space, and we provide the value consumers are looking for," he added.

But for people struggling with the cost of living, it's a difficult argument to make.

"People see that gasoline prices are higher than they were a few years ago, food prices are going to be higher than they were a few years ago," said Sweet, from Oxford Economics.

"But we're not going back down to the prices that we saw pre-pandemic," he added.

That's because easing inflation does not translate into lower sticker prices at the grocery store.

Instead, when wages increase faster than inflation -- as they have been for well over a year now -- the cost of those items relative to wages declines over time.

But it's a slow process.

The Federal Reserve appears increasingly confident that it is winning its battle to bring inflation back down to its long-term target of two percent.

On Friday, Fed chair Jerome Powell said "the time has come" to start lowering interest rates, lifting expectations of a rate cut next month.

"There's clear evidence that businesses' pricing power has started to diminish," said Sweet.

"I think over time, as inflation gets back down to the Fed's target, this discussion of price gouging is going to start to fade to the background," he added.