Global gold production margins have widened to record levels in 2026, with S&P Global estimating all-in sustaining cost margins of roughly $2,800 per ounce, according to a MyJoyOnline opinion article by Bright Simons published on 13 April 2026. The money is flowing at the top of the chain, while the mine itself remains a battlefield of leases, debt, flooded shafts, and workers left to absorb the fallout.
The article said gold prices surged 42 per cent in 2025 alone and had pushed past $5,000 an ounce, describing the rise as the most furious ascent since the late 1970s. African producers, from West African Resources in Burkina Faso to Allied Gold in Ethiopia, are racing to bring new ounces to market. But the real story here is not just the price spike. It is who gets to move quickly, who gets trapped in the wreckage, and who keeps extracting value from the ground while the people around the mine are left dealing with the consequences.
Who Has the Power
The article focused on Ghana’s Bogoso-Prestea mine and said the mine has produced over nine million ounces of gold since 1912. It said Prestea alone has been mined since at least the 1870s, first by European prospectors and then by Ariston Gold Mines from 1912, which sank the shafts and developed the underground workings that still define the site. It said the Government of Ghana bought the assets of the various companies along the belt in the early 1960s and formed the Prestea Goldfields with limited liability under the Ghana State Gold Mining Corporation.
Production at Bogoso-Prestea fell to just a little over 20,000 ounces in 1984 under state control. Peak annual production hit 167,000 ounces in 1964, at an average recovered grade of 11.6 grams per tonne, and West Reef fault-fill quartz veins yielded grades exceeding 100 grams per tonne in individual channel samples. The article’s numbers show a site repeatedly reorganized by state and corporate hands, with the people on the ground inheriting the consequences of each new regime.
A 2017 technical report estimated 5.1 million ounces of gold could still be in the Bogoso-Prestea mining enclave, with underground reserves grading 8.1 grams per tonne and metallurgical recoveries of 94 per cent through carbon-in-leach processing. The site has two functioning shafts, a 1.5 million tonne-per-annum CIL plant, and a separate BIOX® sulphide processing circuit. The mine’s sulphide resource, which constitutes the bulk of the remaining mineral inventory at 1.76 million ounces of measured and indicated resources, requires processing technology and capital intensity that very few operators can sustain.
The Corporate Carousel
Golden Star Resources, the Canadian firm controlled by billionaire Naguib Sawiris, acquired the Bogoso concession in 1999 and the Prestea underground in 2001. The article said Golden Star invested in refurbishing shafts, installing ventilation systems, commissioning BIOX® technology, and deploying the Alimak mechanised shrinkage mining method, but by 2019 had written down the mine’s value by $56.8 million, leading to a net annual loss of $78 million.
Golden Star announced the sale of Bogoso-Prestea to Future Global Resources in July 2020 for up to $95 million, with $5 million upfront, $10 million due in 2021, $15 million in 2023, and a contingent payment of up to $40 million tied to the sulphide project. Future Global Resources was incorporated in December 2019 as a subsidiary of Blue International Holdings and was co-founded by Andrew Cavaghan and Mark Green. Blue International’s portfolio included Joule Africa and that its advisory board featured Lord Dannatt, Lord Triesman, and Philip Green.
A Guardian investigation later revealed that John Glen, a UK Treasury minister from 2018 to 2023, held shares in Blue International, that the UK’s Future Fund had lent the company £3.3 million, and that Devonport Capital, run by Paul Bailey with Thomas Kingston, had extended roughly $5 million to Blue International. Kingston died in February 2024 and Devonport entered administration a year later, with creditors owed £49 million and recovery estimates as low as £11.2 million. The article’s trail of names and financing shows how the apparatus of mining is propped up by public money, private debt, and political proximity.
Workers, Wages, and the Cost of “Restructuring”
FGR’s tenure in Ghana was marked by repeated shutdowns, unpaid wages, and accumulating supplier debts, and Abdul-Moomin Gbana, General Secretary of the Ghana Mineworkers’ Union, said communities around the mine had become “virtually ghost towns.” Workers protested with brass bands and placards reading “Blue Gold is a scam.” That is the clearest direct action in the piece: workers and communities making their own refusal visible while the corporate shell game kept moving.
FGR’s parent restructured the asset into Blue Gold, listed it on NASDAQ via a merger with a blank-cheque firm, and announced it had secured $140 million in restart financing with $65 million held in escrow. Blue Gold’s NASDAQ stock crashed 96.86 per cent from its peak, and the company recorded no revenue, a $15.1 million annual loss, and a working capital deficit of $10.7 million. The market may celebrate paper restructurings, but the mine still sits with unpaid wages, broken promises, and a workforce treated as a line item.
Heath Goldfields was incorporated on 6 February 2024 with a stated capital of GH¢10,000, roughly $700, and applied for the mining lease on 13 February 2024 while the lease was still legally held by FGR/Blue Gold. By September 2024 the Minister of Lands and Natural Resources had terminated the previous lease, and by November the Minerals Commission had approved reassignment to Heath Goldfields. Four days after a letter ostensibly suspending the process, Heath personnel mobilised to site to assert control over vehicles, residential assets, and gold stockpiles.
Heath Goldfields was initially presented to the Minerals Commission as a subsidiary of the Yildirim Group, a major Turkish conglomerate whose mining arm, Yilmaden, operates across several countries, and that a promise of $500 million in investment was stated in the strategic plan. The Catchment Area Community Alliance petitioned the government, noting that publicly available information on the Yildirim Group’s corporate structure does not list Heath Goldfields among its recognised entities. The Minerals Commission bosses told the Minister in an October 23, 2024, letter that Heath is owned by the Yildirim Group.
A new list of financial sponsors later circulated, naming a $30 million shareholder loan, $65 million in Trafigura financing, $100 million from the ECOWAS Bank for Investment & Development, $5 million from First Atlantic Bank, and $6 million from Guaranty Trust Bank. Dr Kwabena Duffuor, a former Minister of Finance and one of Ghana’s wealthiest individuals, is a director of Heath Goldfields, and his son, Dr Kwabena Duffuor Jnr, serves as Board Chairman. Directors and corporate secretaries listed in early filings include Sylvia Naa Odarley Amporful and Edwin Kpedor, a lawyer whose name appears on multiple company documents, and Eureka Capital also features.
Since assuming control, Heath Goldfields is reported to have dismissed over 400 workers, citing “operational restructuring,” and workers accused the company of deceit, discrimination, and financial neglect. Only partial payments of salary arrears have been made and severance packages, provident fund contributions, bonuses, and repatriation entitlements remain largely outstanding, according to worker representatives. A GH¢136 million settlement was later announced, but verification of its completeness remains disputed.
The April 2026 Trafigura offtake involved $65 million in debt financing secured against a stream of 700,000 ounces of gold. At current prices just south of $5,000 per ounce, those ounces carry an aggregate market value approaching $3.5 billion. Trafigura is a $244-billion-revenue commodity trader and the deal may finance stockpile-processing and limited surface-mining operations, but not the full reinvigoration needed.
The underground levels of the mine remain badly flooded well above the 18th Level, with installations between the 18th and 24th Levels, including locomotive trains, power stations, and ore passes, fully submerged, and rehabilitating the underground segment would require capital expenditure measured in the hundreds of millions. Clause 3.4(e) of the April 2, 2026, Trafigura-Heath Debenture assigns Heath Goldfields’ three mining leases, APL-M-147, APL-M-148, and APL-M-149, all dated December 13, 2024, to Trafigura by way of first priority security.
Clause 1.1.12 defers the mining lease security to the Consent Date, defined as the date the Minister for Lands and Natural Resources issues a no-objection letter, and clause 6.4 gives Heath Goldfields 60 days to procure that consent. Section 14 of the Minerals and Mining Act, 2006 (Act 703) prohibits the creation of any encumbrance over a mining lease without prior ministerial consent, and section 21 vests the Government of Ghana with a right of pre-emption over minerals produced from mining concessions. Clause 10.20 of the Trafigura-Heath Prepayment Agreement acknowledges this right, while clauses 4 and 11.1(b) require Heath Goldfields to maintain an Offtake Coverage Ratio of at least 200 per cent at all times, effectively committing all current and future production to Trafigura’s offtake. Clause 11.4(c) prohibits any new prepayment or pre-export financing that might affect this commitment.
Clause 11.4 of the Prepayment Agreement gives Trafigura veto power over dividends, share redemptions, management fees, capital expenditure on sulphide ore, corporate restructuring, change of control, and any new financial indebtedness. The separate Ghanaian Law Share Charge pledges the shares of Heath Goldfields held by Eureka Capital to Trafigura, and on enforcement Trafigura would acquire de facto control of a Ghanaian mining company holding three active mining leases. The legal documents are vague about what happens if ministerial consent is not forthcoming and vague on whether Ghana’s forex laws are respected in the payment model adopted for overseas net-offs of proceeds against debt obligations.
Blue Gold’s international arbitration under the UK-Ghana bilateral investment treaty proceeds at the Permanent Court of Arbitration in The Hague, seeking damages estimated in excess of $1 billion. The Chief Inspector of Mines, Richard Adjei, was emphatic in his August 2025 assessment that the continued accumulation of stagnant water underground violates Regulation 178a of LI 2182. The Tailings Storage Facility demands emergency intervention, Cells 1 and 2 carry no available freeboard in breach of Regulation 264(o) and (p), and construction on Cell 2 and Cell 2A has stalled for over a year due to unpaid contractors. Downstream communities including Dumasi and Bogoso sit in the flood shadow of a potential dam failure.
The Turkish Yilmaden Holdings investment of $500 million, which was the primary basis of approval, has all but disappeared from the record, and according to the terms of the lease, creditor liabilities were to be extinguished within seven days. Persistent reports continue to name unpaid creditors. The article described the situation as chronic jurisdictional chaos and said Ghana’s mining sector and resource governance are trapped in confusion. What emerges instead is a revolving door of under-capitalised operators, escalating legal disputes, idle workers, and flooded mineshafts.