Guinea extends deadline to bid for vacant blocks of giant Simandou iron ore deposit

Rio Tinto held the licence for the entire Simandou deposit since the early 1990s, but was stripped of the northern blocks in 2008 by a Guinean former dictator. (Image courtesy of Rio Tinto Simandou)

Guinea has extended a deadline to request tender document for blocks 1 and 2 of the giant Simandou iron ore deposit,  given up by Israeli tycoon Beny Steinmetz earlier this year, in an effort to boost competition for one of the world’s most-fabled mineral deposits.

The West African country launched the international tender in mid-July, giving companies until Aug. 2 to outline their bids. Given the complexity of the process, however, the government has decided to allow more time for interested parties to prepare, an official close to the tender told Reuters on Tuesday.

Potential bidders now have until Aug. 19 to draw the necessary documents to prepare their proposal and the new deadline for submitting the offer should be revealed soon, the source noted.

Simandou is one of the world’s richest reserves of high-grade iron ore, holding an estimated 2 billion tonnes of the steelmaking ingredient

At two billion tonnes of iron ore with some of the highest grades in the industry, Simandou is one of the world’s biggest and richest reserves of the steelmaking material, but it has a controversial past.

For more than a decade, it was the centre of a bitter dispute that involved Rio Tinto, Brazil’s Vale SA and Israeli diamond mining tycoon Beny Steinmetz.

In 2008, one of Guinea’s former dictators stripped Rio’s rights over two of the four blocks the deposit had been divided on and handed them BSG Resources, Steinmetz’s mining arm. Rio was able keep to the two southern blocks, but only after paying $700 million to the government in 2011. That guaranteed the miner tenure for the lifetime of the Simandou mine.

That deal came under scrutiny in 2016, forcing Rio to fire two senior managers over a questionable $10.5 million payment made to a consultant who helped the company secure the two blocks and alerted authorities, including the US Department of Justice and the UK’s Serious Fraud Office.

BSG Resources and Steinmetz were also subject of several investigations over bribery and corruption accusations, but it was able to put an end to all that in February this year, through a deal with Guinean President Alpha Conde.

As part of the agreement with Guinea, BSGR agreed to walk away from blocks 1 and 2 of the Simandou project, but retained the right to mine the smaller Zogota deposit.

A few weeks later, a London arbitral court told BSGR to pay $1.2 billion to Vale, its former partner Guinea, due to “fraud and breaches of warranty” in inducing the Brazilian miner to enter the joint venture. The tribunal based its decision partly on the fact that the government revoked the concession in 2014 after finding that BSGR had obtained it by bribing officials.

Tender transparency questioned

Strong iron ore prices and the resolution of Steinmetz-related issues increased Guinea’s chances of finding companies interested in acquiring the rights for the vacant blocks, pushing it to launch a tender.

But analysts, including Eric Humphery-Smith from Verisk Maplecroft, have called the transparency of the process into question.

One of the main reasons, argues Eric Humphery-Smith, an analyst at Verisk Maplecroft in London, is that prospective developers must pay $300,000 to access tender specification documents.

Simandou is also one of the most easily exploitable iron ore fields outside of Australia’s Pilbara region

“Such pay-to-play terms undermine the Minister’s claims of transparency,” Humphery-Smith says.

The experts notes that while it’s true that the current process is more transparent than the first-come, first-served method, bidders may still be exposed to reputation risks:

“There are indications that the British law firm Phanar Legal Ltd, selected as the third-party transaction adviser for the tender, may have a conflict of interest. The firm’s director Philip Rogers is a co-director of Guinea Bauxite Corporation Ltd (GBC), a mining company established in January 2019 by Alexander Zotov, a Russian businessman. Zotov holds an active production licence for a bauxite mine in coastal Guinea through his mining company Eurasian Resources (EAR). 

“Even if Rogers acts only as a secretary for these companies, his active interest in the Guinean mining sector leads one to question his law firm’s impartiality in the Simandou tendering process. In other words, Phanar’s management of the tender could lead the contracting authorities to look favourably on a prospective bid by one of Zotov’s companies for another mine concession.”

Rio Tinto holds a 45% stake in blocks three and four of Simandou, which it is actively planning to develop. State-controlled Chinalco owns 40% and the Guinea government 15%.