Westminster’s favourite pariah state has done it again. Guinea, the West African gold giant, has pulled the rug from under the global bullion market. President Mamady Doumbouya’s government announced an immediate halt to all raw gold exports. The reason? A push to force mining companies to refine the stuff on home soil. It’s a classic resource nationalism play, but with a twist. The ban is sudden and total. No exceptions for existing contracts. The message is clear: if you want Guinea’s gold, you build your refineries here.
Sources in the City are rattled. London’s bullion market, already squeamish about supply chain ethics, now faces a new headache. The price of gold ticked up two per cent on the news. But the real story is the long-term squeeze. Guinea produces around 200 tonnes of gold a year. That’s a lot of shiny metal suddenly directed into new, untested local refineries. The risk? Smuggling. Fraud. And a lot of angry mining executives.
Downing Street called for calm. A spokesman said they were “monitoring the situation closely”. But behind the scenes, the Foreign Office is fuming. They had been negotiating a trade deal with Conakry. This move throws that into chaos. Labour backbenchers, however, are quietly pleased. They see it as a win for ethical supply chains. Funny how that works.
The bigger question is what this means for the global gold trade. If Guinea gets away with it, other producers will watch and learn. Mali, Burkina Faso, even South Africa could follow suit. The era of cheap raw materials is ending. And Westminster, with its historic reliance on London as the world’s gold hub, is waking up to a new reality.
For now, the markets are jittery. But the real game is in the shadows. Talks between mining firms and the junta. Backchannel promises. Leaked memos. That’s where this story will break next. Watch this space.