
CAK approves Kwale Titanium’s parent company sale to Canadian firm
- Published By Jane Njeri For The Statesman Digital
- 1 year ago
The Competition Authority of Kenya (CAK) has approved an acquisition of Kwale Titanium’s parent company, Base Titanium Limited, by EFR Australia PTY Limited.
EFR Australia PTY Limited is an Australian-based company that is wholly owned by Energy Fuels Inc. (EFI), a firm registered in Canada.
EFI is a mining development and production company that engages in the exploration, evaluation, development, and mining/production of uranium, vanadium, and rare earth element properties.
In the deal, EFR Australia PTY Limited will take over operation in Kenya a few months before the closure of operation by Base Titanium later this year. Thereafter, the Victoria-based firm will resume operations.
“The proposed transaction involves the acquisition of 100% of the issued and outstanding shares in the capital of Base Resources Limited by way of a scheme of arrangement in exchange for shares in the capital of Energy Fuels Inc. According to the parties, the rationale for the transaction is diversification of EFR PTY’s mining business,” CAK said in a statement.
“Therefore, the transaction qualified as a merger within the meaning of sections 2 and 41 of the Competition Act CAP 504. The Competition Act stipulates that a merger, or takeover, may occur when an undertaking directly or indirectly acquires control over another business within Kenya. This may happen through, among others, purchase/lease of shares, exchange of shares, vertical integration.”
Earlier, Base Resources Limited, an Australian firm that owns Base Titanium Limited in Kwale, informed the shareholders that they will get 0.026 of Energy Fuels common shares after the transaction.
Kwale’s Base Titanium Limited owns and operates a mineral mine in the coastal county and explores ilmenite, rutile, and zircon for export.
“One criterion of assessing a merger’s impact on competition is the post-merger market share of the undertakings involved in the transaction. Post-merger, the merged entity’s market share will not change since the target and the acquiring group do not operate in Kenya,” CAK added.
“Therefore, the proposed transaction will not affect the structure and concentration of the market for Page 3 of 3 titanium minerals in Kenya. Therefore, the proposed transaction is unlikely to lead to a substantial lessening of competition in the market for titanium minerals in Kenya.”
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