Kathmandu, Jun 17
The Department of Mines and Geology (DMG)
has opened licenses of 10 mines ranging from coal to gold located in various States
across the country.
Of the total non-petroleum mines opened for
licensing, three are of copper, two of limestone, and one each of salt, gold,
coal, kaoline and granite.
The DMG has published a notice on Wednesday
to bid out mining license of four mines and prospecting licenses for the
remaining sites.
Mining license will be awarded for
limestone deposits at Khamilek in Kapurkot Gaunpalika of Salyan district and
Kandrang Gadhi in Benighat-Rorang Gaupalika of Dhading with 5 km and 5.3 km
square km area. Kamilek has electricity and road access while Kandrang Gadhi
has only road connectivity.
Other projects ready for mining license
award are salt deposit at Narsing Khola in Barahagaun Muktikshetra Gaunpalika
in Mustang district and granite deposit at Daman in Thaha Municipality in
Makwanpur.
Rest of the sites – gold deposit in Rolpa,
Coal in Palpa, Kaoline in Makwanpur, and copper in Makwanpur, Udaypur and
Dhading - are ready for the prospecting licenses.
“As the quantity and quality of the
deposits of those six sites is not studied in detail, the department has opened
licenses for exploration as well,” said Dr. Janak Bahadur Chand, Information
Officer of the DMG.
According to the notice, gold prospect at
Gam in Sunchhahari Gaunpalika of Rolpa, kaoline prospect at Daman in Thaha
Municipality, coal prospect at Jhirubas in Nisdi Gaunpalika of Palpa, and
copper at Dhusa in Benighat-Rorang Gaunpalika of Dhading, Agrakhola in Thaha
Municipality of Makwanpur and Lekhani in Katari Municipality of Udaypur
district are open for prospecting license.
Kaoline is clay created by weathering
minerals and used in ceramics, said Dr. Chand.
The gold prospect site in Ropla has the
largest site including 30 sq. km followed by copper prospect in Udaypur with 24
sq. km, and copper in Dhading and Makwanpur with 12 sq. km each.
The DMG has already carried out exploration
works of these minerals and prepared data packages consisting of Terms of
Reference (TOR) with general and technical information of these
prospects/deposits.
“The bid notice is published in the
newspaper and online. But this is not e-bidding,” said Dr. Chand.
He said that since the company needed to be
registered in Nepal to be eligible to apply for the mining and prospecting
license, the lockdown would not deter the interested ones.
The DMG had prepared the detail of the
sites and bid notice much earlier but had waited for the government to ease the
lockdown to publish it, said Dr. Chand.
Published in The Rising Nepal daily on 18 June 2020.
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