Audio By Carbonatix
Blue Gold Limited, a gold development and technology company listed on Nasdaq (BGL), has announced that it has secured a total of US$140 million in committed capital to restart operations at the Bogoso and Prestea gold mines in Ghana.
The funding package, according to the company, includes a newly secured US$65 million loan from a new institutional investor and an earlier US$75 million equity line of credit, which remains undrawn.
Both financing arrangements are earmarked exclusively for reviving the 5.1-million-ounce mine located in Ghana’s Western region.
The company stated that the US$65 million loan is currently being held in escrow by its lawyers, pending the resolution of a protracted lease dispute between Blue Gold and the Government of Ghana.
Willingness to end legal dispute
In a statement released in New York on Wednesday, Blue Gold’s Chief Executive Officer, Andrew Cavaghan, said the company was ready to drop ongoing litigation against the Government of Ghana if the mining lease dispute could be resolved immediately.
“This funding, along with the amount that is already committed, clearly evidences our capacity to invest in and restart the mine to bring it back into full production,” Mr. Cavaghan said.
He alleged that in September 2024, Ghana’s previous administration had “wrongfully terminated” the Bogoso and Prestea mining lease, effectively blocking Blue Gold from injecting secured funds into the mine’s rehabilitation and restart programme.
“We immediately disputed the legality of this action, and the matter is now in international arbitration,” Cavaghan added. “We are confident that we can reach a resolution, including a settlement, to ensure that this important mine is brought back into production as quickly as possible.”
Strategic move towards gold-backed currency
The planned restart of the Bogoso and Prestea mine forms part of Blue Gold’s broader corporate strategy to integrate traditional gold production with emerging financial technologies.
The company has announced plans to tokenise its gold output, enabling the creation of what it calls the world’s first global gold-backed currency — an initiative being developed through its recently launched Digital Division.
According to Blue Gold, the integration of blockchain technology and asset-backed digital instruments will “redefine how gold is produced, accessed, and owned,” providing investors and consumers with an innovative link between physical commodities and digital finance.
The Bogoso and Prestea mines, located near Tarkwa in Ghana’s Western Region, are among the country’s oldest and most historic gold operations. Once owned by Golden Star Resources, the assets have faced operational and ownership challenges in recent years following changes in control and declining production levels.
Blue Gold Limited acquired the mine with plans to modernise operations, improve safety, and expand output through new investment and technology-driven management systems.
Outlook
If the dispute with the Ghanaian government is resolved, the US$140 million restart plan is expected to trigger renewed mining activity in the Bogoso-Prestea corridor, creating hundreds of local jobs and reviving economic activity in one of Ghana’s major gold belts.
Industry analysts say the move could serve as a test case for how international investors and the Ghanaian government manage mining sector disputes in a climate increasingly shaped by global environmental, social, and governance (ESG) expectations.
About Blue Gold Limited
Blue Gold Limited (Nasdaq: BGL) is a gold development and technology company focused on acquiring and revitalising high-potential mining assets across strategic global jurisdictions. The company seeks to merge traditional resource development with financial innovation, including digital tokenisation of gold assets.
Blue Gold says its mission is to unlock untapped value in the gold sector through responsible mining practices, operational transparency, and new monetisation models that combine resource extraction with fintech-driven access to gold.
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