"There is a massive copper deposit located in Balkhab district of Saripul province," Sharani told reporters in Kabul today at a joint press conference with U.S. deputy under secretary of defense Paul Brinkley. "It is valued at billions of U.S. dollars and one of the biggest untapped copper mines in Afghanistan."
The Afghan Geological Survey, which is mapping the country's mineral resources with help from the Task Force for Business and Stability Operation set up by Brinkley, estimates the country's mineral wealth at $3 trillion. The estimate is based on a survey of 30% of the country's land mass. Afghanistan may hold unexplored mineral deposits worth as much as $1 trillion, the Pentagon said in June, citing U.S. Geological Survey data.
The new copper discovery is bigger than the current Aynak copper deposit in Logar province, southeast of Kabul, according to a report published by the GSA today.
"This discovery appears to be a volcano genetic massive sulfide deposit—a deposit type that could supply much of the world's gold, copper, lead and zinc," said the report.
Gold and copper were also found in the Zarkashan area of Ghazni province in eastern Afghanistan with an estimated value of $30 billion while lithium deposits valued at around $60 billion were discovered in four eastern and western provinces of Afghanistan, the report added.
Geologists also discovered rare earth minerals and niobium deposits in the Khanneshin area of Southern Helmand province with an estimated value of more than $89 billion. Two other copper deposits were found to the north of the current Aynak mines in Logar province which may be as large as the existing Aynak copper deposit, said the report.