Posted Under Commodity News, On 15-09-2025
Source: mining.comCanadian miner Alamos Gold (TSX, NYSE: AGI) is selling its Turkish subsidiary for $470 million to Tumad Madencilik Sanayi, a unit of conglomerate Nurol Holding, ending a billion-dollar legal battle with Ankara.
The deal hands over the Kirazl?, A?? Da?? and Çamyurt projects in northwestern Turkey to Tumad. It also sets out that arbitration proceedings launched in 2021 by Alamos’ Netherlands units against Turkey will remain suspended and be permanently discontinued once contractual milestones are met.
Alamos entered Turkey in 2010 but faced persistent setbacks. Its most high-profile clash came in 2019, when mining concessions for the Kirazl? gold project, near Mount Ida, expired amid mass protests. Activists accused Alamos of excessive tree cutting and planned cyanide use, allegations the miner denied.
It also clarified at the time that cyanide would be used in the final step of the extraction process and that it had taken measures to ensure there would be no impact in the forested area.
In response, Alamos filed a $1 billion arbitration claim against the Turk
ish government for what it called “unfair and inequitable treatment.” That claim will be dropped once the sale closes.
The Kirazl? project was projected to produce 104,000 ounces of gold annually over five years at all-in sustaining costs of $373 per ounce, based on a 2017 feasibility study.
Alamos plans to use proceeds to pay down debt and advance its key growth projects, including the Phase 3+ Expansion at Island Gold in Ontario, the Lynn Lake Project in Manitoba, and the Puerto Del Aire project in Mexico.
Analysts at Jefferies said investing in these projects would drive Alamos’ production growth by over 80% to 1 million ounces of gold by 2029.
The transaction is expected to close in the fourth quarter of 2025.