In Support of the Exclusive Aggregator Mandate Issued to Bawa Rock Limited.
1. Introduction
The Chamber of Licensed Gold Buyers (CLGB) issues this statement in response to the Minority in Parliament’s assessment of the issuance of an exclusive gold aggregation license to Bawa Rock Limited under the GoldBod Aggregation Model.
The Chamber affirms, based on industry data, field experience, and institutional performance benchmarks, that Bawa Rock Ltd has demonstrably delivered on the objectives of the GoldBod framework and that maintaining its exclusive mandate is strategically necessary for the continued formalisation, stabilisation,
and regulation of Ghana’s Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining (ASM) gold supply chain.
This statement also records the Chamber’s formal position of protection and institutional support for its member, Bawa Rock Ltd.
GoldBod is an upgrade of PMMC, not a rebranding
2. Proven Evidence of Performance: Bawa Rock Ltd
Since the commencement of the GoldBod aggregation system, Bawa Rock Ltd has:
• Built and operationalized a nationwide purchasing and aggregation network linking licensed miners, buying agents, assayers, and transport operators.
• Enforced uniform pricing transparency and compliance standards across participating ASM operators.
• Introduced full traceability and documentation controls, replacing informal and undocumented trade flows.
• Significantly reduced smuggling, leakages, and parallel market activity by centralizing gold offtake.
• Improved foreign exchange capture, export predictability, and revenue reporting.
• Successfully and legitimately satisfying all the licensing requirements of the Aggregator category of Goldbod. The Chamber’s internal monitoring confirms that ASM gold that previously exited the country through informal routes is now being captured within the formal national framework, directly attributable to the
centralized aggregation mechanism executed by Bawa Rock Ltd.
3. Strategic Logic of Maintaining an Exclusive Aggregation Mandate
The exclusive mandate is not a concession; it is a structural instrument of reform.
Its logic is grounded in five core policy outcomes:
1. Market Discipline & Order
Fragmented aggregation introduces price arbitrage, quality dilution, regulatory evasion, and enforcement paralysis. A single aggregator eliminates these distortions.
2. Traceability & Compliance
A unified chain of custody is only achievable under centralised control. Multiple competing aggregators fracture traceability and weaken compliance.
3. Formalisation of ASM
The ASM sector’s transition from informal survival activity into a regulated industrial contributor requires one accountable institutional anchor.
4. Revenue Protection & FX Stability
Centralised aggregation ensures accurate declarations, export proceeds repatriation, and macroeconomic stability.
5. Policy Accountability
With one mandated aggregator, the State has a single accountable operator, eliminating diffusion of responsibility.
Therefore, the exclusive mandate is a governance tool, not a commercial favour.
4. Comparative Policy Frameworks
a) COCOBOD Model – Ghana
Ghana’s cocoa sector offers a successful precedent:
COCOBOD operates a centralized commodity governance system that ensures:
• Price stability
• Quality control
• Producer protection
• Export market credibility
GoldBod’s model mirrors this architecture. In both cases, centralised authority is the mechanism through which national value is secured.
b) Tanzania and Rwanda Gold Aggregation Models
Tanzania and Rwanda, though at different stages of implementation, pursue state-directed aggregation and formalisation of ASM gold through:
• Licensed buying centers
• Central reporting systems
• Regulated export pipelines
However, the absence of a single dominant aggregator in those systems has led to persistent challenges with leakage, enforcement fragmentation, and informal trading.
Ghana’s GoldBod model—anchored by Bawa Rock Ltd—goes further by locking the entire ASM supply chain into one coherent institutional structure, producing superior outcomes in traceability and revenue capture.
5. Protection of the Chamber’s Member: Bawa Rock Ltd
The CLGB formally records that:
• Bawa Rock Ltd has acted in good faith, in compliance with national policy and regulatory directives.
• The company has made significant capital, infrastructure, and operational investments in reliance on the exclusivity of its mandate.
• Any destabilisation of this mandate introduces legal uncertainty, investor risk, and systemic regression of the ASM reform agenda.
Accordingly, the Chamber shall defend the continued operation and mandate of Bawa Rock Ltd as a matter of institutional integrity, fit and proper assessment, market stability, and national economic interest.
6. Conclusion
The Bank of Ghana (BoG) has the exclusive legal mandate to regulate the entry of new banks into Ghana’s financial system and financial centres. This mandate is grounded mainly in statute and exercised through licensing, supervision, and prudential regulation. Like the Bank of Ghana, Goldbod is empowered by
GHANA-GOLDBOD-ACT- 2025 (ACT 1140) to determine the market entry conditions of applicant licensee.
The exclusive aggregation mandate issued to Bawa Rock Ltd is therefore not an anomaly. It is the logical outcome of global commodity governance best practice, adapted to Ghana’s specific ASM challenges.
Weakening this structure would reverse formalisation gains, reopen smuggling channels, destabilise revenues, and fracture regulatory control.
The Chamber therefore strongly endorses the maintenance of Bawa Rock Ltd’s exclusive aggregator mandate as the cornerstone of Ghana’s gold sector reform under the GoldBod framework until a strategic time the Goldbod will accommodate the entry of licensees into the category.
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