The output, which includes industrial production, artisanal mining, and state seizures, increased by more than 30 tonnes compared with 2024, marking one of the strongest annual performances in the country’s extractive history.
Minister Gouba disclosed the figures while presenting his ministry’s 2025 performance report to Prime Minister Rimtalba Jean Emmanuel Ouédraogo.
He reported an 89.66 percent achievement rate under the ministry’s performance contract, attributing the gains largely to mining-sector reforms anchored in economic sovereignty.
“The mining sector performed very well in 2025,” Gouba said, noting that about 42 tonnes of gold came from artisanal mining activities.
He attributed the surge to the operationalisation of the state-owned Burkina Faso Mining Participation Company, SOPAMIB, as well as tighter oversight of the country’s 15 industrial mines.
Beyond mining, the ministry reported notable progress in energy access and urban infrastructure. Nearly 160,000 households were newly connected to the national electricity grid in 2025, while 131 rural localities gained access to power.
Urban and peri-urban security was another focus area, with over 25,000 streetlights installed across cities and surrounding communities.
Looking ahead, the Burkinabè government plans to deepen reforms in 2026, including restructuring the Bureau of Mines and Geology of Burkina Faso and reorganising artisanal mining into formal cooperatives.
Authorities are also targeting at least 10 semi-mechanised mining projects, all led entirely by local private investors.
“In 2026, we will work to firmly entrench energy and mining sovereignty,” Gouba said.








