Audio By Carbonatix
IMANI Africa, a Ghana-based education and policy think tank, has grown skeptical about whether Ghana will be able to fulfill China’s request to mine and export the country’s bauxite over the next 12 years.
But Parliament’s Finance Committee Chairman, Mark Assibey-Yeboah refutes IMANI’s claims, stating that Ghana has a massive supply of untapped reserves.
“IMANI’s research is not gospel,” Assibey-Yeboah told Joy FM’s Daniel Dadzie on the Super Morning Show, Thursday. “We have reserves that far exceed what IMANI is saying.
Per the Sinohydro barter agreement, Ghana has agreed to allow China access to its bauxite in exchange for a Chinese-backed $2 billion infrastructure overhaul of Ghana’s roads, bridges and dams.
To begin the mining of bauxite, Ghanaian authorities said they would establish a refinery within the next three years and select its own contractor to refine the bauxite, which would then be given to the Chinese.

A three-year moratorium has been put in place while the refinery is established. Following the moratorium, Ghana will begin payment in the form of bauxite.
Read more: Minority expresses concern over Ghana Sinohydro deal
But IMANI research shows that it is highly unlikely the refinery can be built in three years, founding President, Franklin Cudjoe said on the show.
“The time needed to finance and execute a bauxite mine – alumina refinery complex – shall most certainly exceed the three-year horizon, which constitutes the grace period, after which repayments are expected to commence,” a detailed IMANI document reveals.
The think tank further raises questions about how bauxite refining can be a solid source of financial capacity to pay back the $2 billion project.
“Considering how many similar deals since 2006 have fallen through the cracks, including some with very competent partners, such as Alcoa, Alara, and Vimetco, the likelihood of smooth sailing arrangements within the grace period is almost nil.”
However, Assibey-Yeboah ascertains that the Chinese would not have signed on to the deal if they did not think Ghana could not supply the resources.
“What are the fears here? We have done the same with cocoa and crude oil.”
He continued: “Our roads are bad. Our bridges are in deplorable conditions. So here is a deal where we can get Sinohydro to fix our infrastructure. It benefits all of us. What is the problem here?
Latest Stories
-
Ocean Harmony Project founder warns plastic pollution is entering the human food chain through fish
7 minutes -
Ghana’s floods are behavioural disasters, not natural ones – Environmental advocates
21 minutes -
Nigeria clinches $10,000 grand prize as 4th ECOWAS Regional Cybersecurity Hackathon 2026 ends in Accra
2 hours -
AGI partners Danish industries to advance value chain sustainabilityÂ
2 hours -
Missing UCC student found dead as police launch investigations
2 hours -
Aflao border plunged into darkness, exposing travellers to attacks – Union Secretary
3 hours -
ECOWAS unites on minerals, industrialisation to power AfCFTA
3 hours -
Oti House of Chiefs to unveil 7-member committee on Nkwanta South conflict
3 hours -
Be advocates of modern parenting – Adaklu DCE
3 hours -
Ketu North MCE advocates agricultural mechanisation to boost productivity
3 hours -
The Thomas Partey Case: Presumption of innocence, sovereignty and the World Cup
3 hours -
Parents urged not to give away children due to poverty
3 hours -
Konongo crash leaves multiple injured
4 hours -
Book Launch: Political Economy of Institutionalising Monitoring & Evaluation Practice in Africa
4 hours -
Residents protest destruction of sacred Dodowa Forest for interim market Â
4 hours