Guyana · Mining
Key Facts
—Record half-year declarations Guyana declared nearly 240,000 ounces of gold in the first half of 2026, meeting the budgeted target for the first time in about nine years.
—Driving non-oil export growth Gold exports rose 63.4% to US$1.6 billion in 2025, and non-oil exports are projected to increase another 8.6% to US$2.5 billion in 2026, led by gold and bauxite.
—Formalization boosts compliance Mandatory local bank accounts, compulsory record updates, and intensified audits are shifting declarations from informal channels to official figures, reducing leakages.
—ASM sector dominance Artisanal and small-scale mining accounts for over 70% of production and directly employed more than 20,000 people in 2025, up from 13,681 in 2020.
—Oil-plus-gold economic boom Gold is Guyana’s most important mineral export after oil, with the non-oil economy projected to grow 10.8% in 2026, supporting construction and services.
Guyana’s gold declarations climbed to nearly 240,000 ounces in the first half of 2026, putting the sector on track to meet an ambitious annual target as a government crackdown on smuggling channels more production into the formal economy.
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Declarations hit a nine-year milestone
Natural Resources Minister Vickram Bharrat confirmed that declared gold output reached the budgeted target for the first half of the year. “I think it’s 233,000 ounces… about 25,000 ounces more than last year from the same period,” he said, adding that “Right now, we’re close to 240,000 ounces.” Government and party messaging underscored that this marks the first time in roughly nine years the half-year budgeted target has been met.
The strong mid-year performance follows a steady climb in annual declarations: 432,113 ounces in 2023, 434,067 ounces in 2024, and 484,321 ounces in 2025. The full-year 2026 target is 510,450 ounces.
With an average projected gold price of US$3,575 per troy ounce for 2026, hitting the annual goal would imply a declared production value well above US$1.8 billion.
For context, a troy ounce is the standard unit of weight used globally for precious metals, equivalent to about 31.1 grams. When officials speak of “declarations,” they mean the amount of gold that miners officially report and sell through state-approved channels, primarily the Guyana Gold Board. This figure matters because undeclared gold — often smuggled across borders to avoid taxes and royalties — represents a direct loss of public revenue that could otherwise fund roads, schools, and healthcare.
The informal-to-formal shift accelerates
Finance Minister Ashni Singh outlined a package of formalization measures designed to improve traceability and reward compliance. These include mandatory local bank accounts for all miners and stakeholders, compulsory updates of personal records, and intensified audits across declarants.
The government explicitly links these efforts to reducing leakages and improving declarations in 2026.
The logic behind these measures is straightforward. When miners operate entirely in cash, transactions are hard for authorities to track.
Requiring local bank accounts creates a digital footprint for every sale, making it far more difficult to under-report production. Compulsory record updates ensure the government knows who is actively mining and where, while intensified audits act as a deterrent against misreporting.
Together, these steps aim to shrink the gap between what is actually pulled from the ground and what appears in official statistics.
Why this matters for residents and investors
For Guyanese residents, the formalization drive translates into broader economic benefits. The gold sector directly employed more than 20,000 persons in 2025, up sharply from 13,681 in 2020.
Higher official declarations mean more tax revenue for public services and cash grants, while compliant small and medium-scale miners gain better access to finance and legitimate supply chains. Four Canadian companies now hold projects in Guyana with a combined resource estimate of 14.6 million ounces of gold under development, signaling long-term investment confidence.
The significance extends well beyond the mining camps. Guyana’s economy has been transformed by offshore oil discoveries in recent years, but gold remains the backbone of the non-oil private sector.
When gold does well, spending ripples through construction, transport, equipment supply, and local services in interior regions where few other formal jobs exiSt The projected 10.8% growth in the non-oil economy for 2026 rests heavily on mining’s shoulders, making the success of these formalization efforts a national economic priority rather than a narrow sectoral concern.
What to watch next is whether the government can sustain this compliance momentum through the full year. The second half often brings heavier rains that can disrupt operations in Guyana’s interior, and higher gold prices can paradoxically increase the incentive to smuggle rather than declare through official channels.
Another open question is how small-scale miners — many of whom have operated informally for decades — will adapt to the new banking and record-keeping requirements, and whether enforcement will remain consistent or face political pushback in mining-dependent communities.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much gold did Guyana declare in the first half of 2026?
Guyana declared nearly 240,000 ounces of gold in the first half of 2026, roughly 25,000 ounces more than the same period in 2025 and meeting the half-year budgeted target for the first time in about nine years.
What is driving the increase in official gold declarations?
A government crackdown on illegal gold mining and smuggling, combined with formalization measures such as mandatory local bank accounts, compulsory record updates, and intensified audits, is channeling more production through official declaration points like the Guyana Gold Board.
How important is gold to Guyana’s economy beyond oil?
Gold is Guyana’s most important mineral export after oil. Gold exports rose 63.4% to US$1.6 billion in 2025.
The sector also directly employs over 20,000 people and supports non-oil activities such as construction and services, contributing to a projected 10.8% growth in the non-oil economy for 2026.
Sources: Mining declarations up by 25,000 ounces in 1st half of 2026, Guyana misses 2025 gold target, measures identified to increase declarations this year, Tax relief, infrastructure spending to drive mining growth in 2026, Guyana sets 2026 gold declaration target at 510,450 ounces, Gov’t projects 16.2% growth in 2026, Guyana is on track for a strong year in gold production
View original source — Rio Times ↗



