Another African country tightens grip on its gold sector after up to $3.8 billion in annual exports go undeclared

Africa’s third-largest gold producer , Mali has launched a new state agency to regulate its sprawling artisanal gold industry after authorities uncovered major discrepancies between the country’s officially declared gold exports and the volumes recorded by importing countries, highlighting the scale of illicit trade draining billions of dollars from one of Africa’s largest gold producers.

Another African country tightens grip on its gold sector after up to $3.8 billion in annual exports go undeclared
Mali is tightening oversight of its gold sector after estimates showed billions of dollars’ worth of artisanal gold leave the country through undeclared exports each year.

Africa’s third-largest gold producer , Mali has launched a new state agency to regulate its sprawling artisanal gold industry after authorities uncovered major discrepancies between the country’s officially declared gold exports and the volumes recorded by importing countries, highlighting the scale of illicit trade draining billions of dollars from one of Africa’s largest gold producers.

  • Mali has created a new state agency to regulate its artisanal gold sector after uncovering major discrepancies between officially declared gold exports and volumes reported by importing countries.
  • Authorities estimate that up to $3.77 billion worth of gold leaves the country each year through undeclared exports, depriving the state of significant revenue.
  • The move is part of a broader overhaul of Mali’s mining sector, which has seen tighter regulations, higher state participation and reforms aimed at boosting public earnings.
  • The government hopes the new regulator will curb smuggling, formalise artisanal mining and strengthen oversight of one of Africa’s largest gold industries.

The government said the newly created Malian Office of Precious Substances will centralise and oversee the trade of gold and other precious minerals, particularly from artisanal and small-scale miners, as Bamako steps up efforts to tighten state control over its most important export.

The move comes as Mali pursues one of Africa’s most aggressive mining reform programmes, seeking to recover lost revenues from a sector that underpins its economy while increasing the state’s share of mineral wealth.

According to the government, artisanal mining employs nearly 2 million people across 350 to 400 mining sites, but much of the gold produced never enters official export channels.

DON'T MISS THIS: Mali and Canadian miner reset ties over $900 million gold asset with 10-year deal

That informal trade has become increasingly costly. A 2024 report by Swiss NGO SWISSAID estimated that 30 to 57 metric tonnes of Malian gold are exported each year without being officially declared, representing between $1.98 billion and $3.77 billion in annual trade.

The report also estimated that Mali produced around 300 metric tonnes of undeclared gold worth $13.5 billion between 2012 and 2022, suggesting the country has been losing billions of dollars in export earnings and tax revenues for more than a decade.

Gold and grievances: Mali’s Junta detains Gold CEO, seeks $160M payout
Gold and grievances: Mali’s Junta detains Gold CEO, seeks $160M payout

Latest step in Mali’s mining overhaul

The new regulator is the latest measure in a sweeping overhaul of Mali’s mining industry.

Since adopting a new mining code in 2023, the military-led government has increased taxes on miners, expanded state ownership in mining projects from 20% to at least 35%, strengthened oversight of mining operations and launched audits that recovered about 761 billion CFA francs ($1.2 billion) in unpaid revenues from mining companies.

DON'T MISS THIS: Mali recovers $1.2 billion unpaid dues from mining firms under new code

Those reforms also triggered a prolonged dispute with Canadian miner Barrick Mining, whose Loulo-Gounkoto complex, Mali’s biggest gold mine, was caught in a two-year standoff over the new rules before both sides reached a settlement.

Analysts say the creation of the new agency signals that Mali is extending its reform agenda beyond industrial mining to the largely informal artisanal sector, where oversight has remained weak despite the industry’s growing contribution to national production.

Part of a wider African trend

Across Africa, governments are moving to capture more value from their mineral resources amid elevated commodity prices and rising global demand for critical minerals and precious metals.

DON'T MISS THIS: Mali sets up state-owned firm to oversee mining assets and raise state returns

Neighbouring Burkina Faso, for example, has tightened controls on artisanal gold exports and strengthened state involvement in the sector as part of efforts to curb smuggling and improve revenue collection.

Artisanal miners work at a gold mining site in Mali, where the government has launched a new agency to regulate the country’s informal gold trade.
Artisanal miners work at a gold mining site in Mali, where the government has launched a new agency to regulate the country’s informal gold trade.

Experts say formalising artisanal mining has become a priority because the sector accounts for more than 20% of global gold production and supports the livelihoods of more than 10 million people, yet much of its output remains outside official supply chains.

For Mali, bringing more of that production into the formal economy could significantly boost public finances at a time when the government is seeking to maximise returns from its natural resources.

Official figures from the national statistics agency, Instat, show Mali’s declared gold exports climbed to 2.75 trillion CFA francs ($4.81 billion) in 2025 from 1.61 trillion CFA francs ($2.81 billion) a year earlier.

DON'T MISS THIS: Billions in smuggled gold flow from Africa into UAE annually, SwissAid reveals

South Africa remained the largest destination for Mali’s officially declared gold exports, accounting for 60.4% of shipments, followed by the United Arab Emirates at 12.2% and Australia at 12.1%.

But with billions of dollars’ worth of artisanal gold still believed to be leaving the country outside official channels, the success of the new regulator will ultimately be measured not by its creation, but by whether it can bring one of Africa’s largest informal gold markets into the formal economy.