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concession vs licence Guinea

Concession vs Licence in Guinea (2026): Which Is Right for Your Energy or Infrastructure Project?

By Global Law Experts
– posted 5 hours ago

Every developer evaluating an IPP, hydropower plant or port-linked infrastructure project in Guinea faces the same threshold question: should you pursue a state concession or apply for an exploitation licence? The choice between a concession vs licence in Guinea determines your tax exposure, land-access rights, fiscal stabilisation options, dispute-resolution protections and, since the government’s aggressive 2025 enforcement campaign, the realistic likelihood that your permit survives its full term. This guide delivers a source-backed, dimension-by-dimension comparison of both options, quantifies costs where authoritative data exists, maps the enforcement risks that reshaped the landscape from mid-2025 onward, and closes with a concrete decision framework: choose a concession when your project meets certain criteria, choose a licence when it meets others.

Guinea is a civil-law jurisdiction with a resource-rich economy. The legal framework governing energy and extractive projects draws on the Mining Code (Code Minier), sector-specific energy legislation, the 2022 Local Content Law, and individually negotiated concession agreements published on the government’s contract transparency portal. Since 2024, the transitional military government has moved from policy reform to active enforcement, revoking dozens of permits and concessions for inactivity, non-compliance or failure to meet development milestones.

For sponsors and in-house counsel, the stakes are binary. Pick the wrong instrument and you face either an under-protected position that leaves you vulnerable to revocation with limited arbitration recourse, or a costly, over-engineered structure that delays financial close by years. The analysis below equips you to make that call with confidence.

Option A: The Concession, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal Form and Typical Scope

A concession in Guinea is a long-term grant from the state, typically issued by presidential or ministerial decree and formalised through a dedicated concession agreement (convention de concession). It is not merely a permit, it is a bilateral contract between the state and the concessionaire. Concession agreements for major projects are published on Guinea’s official contract portal and are available for public review through the ResourceContracts database. The Guinea Alumina Corporation (GAC) bauxite concession, for example, includes detailed annexes covering fiscal terms, infrastructure obligations and export rights.

Concessions are typically required, or at minimum strongly favoured, for large-scale projects involving infrastructure build-operate-transfer (BOT) obligations, substantial capital expenditure and multi-decade operational horizons. In the energy sector, this includes utility-scale hydropower projects, large thermal IPPs connected to the national grid, and port or rail infrastructure tied to resource exports.

Typical Rights Granted

A well-negotiated concession provides the broadest bundle of rights available under Guinean law. These commonly include:

  • Exclusive exploitation rights over a defined area and resource for the concession term.
  • Land access and expropriation powers, the concession agreement may authorise the concessionaire to acquire surface rights or require the state to facilitate expropriation on the project’s behalf.
  • Export and port-access rights, particularly important for resource-linked energy projects (e.g., captive power for alumina refining with bauxite export components).
  • Fiscal stabilisation clauses, negotiated provisions that freeze or cap certain taxes, royalties or customs duties for the concession term, shielding the project from adverse legislative changes.
  • Investor-state arbitration, many Guinean concession agreements include ICSID or ICC arbitration clauses, providing recourse outside domestic courts.

Concessions therefore give stronger rights over third-party infrastructure, exports and land access than licences, but only when those rights are expressly negotiated and included in the agreement text. A concession without robust stabilisation or arbitration clauses offers little practical advantage over a well-structured licence.

Typical Obligations

The broader rights come with correspondingly heavier obligations. A Guinean concession typically embeds strict investment milestones, construction timelines, minimum expenditure commitments, environmental and social impact management plans, and progressive local-content targets. Failure to meet these milestones triggers the penalty and revocation mechanisms that the government enforced with unprecedented vigour in 2025. Concessions also require the holder to be a Guinean-incorporated company, often necessitating a local joint-venture structure or subsidiary formation. The National Mining Commission must approve the grant, and the Minister of Mines (or the relevant energy ministry, depending on the sector) makes the formal recommendation.

Option B: The Exploitation / Operation Licence, What It Is, When It Applies, Who It Suits

Legal Form and Scope

An exploitation licence (permis d’exploitation) or operation licence is an administrative permit issued by the relevant ministry or regulator. Unlike a concession, it does not require a bespoke bilateral contract or presidential decree. The licence grants permission to carry out defined activities, generation, distribution, or resource extraction, within specified parameters and for a defined period, subject to statutory conditions and periodic renewal.

Exploitation licences are the default instrument for smaller or mid-scale energy projects: distributed generation, captive power plants for industrial facilities, solar or wind installations with limited land footprints, and operations where the developer does not need broad expropriation or export rights. The application and approval process is generally faster and less expensive than negotiating a full concession agreement.

Typical Rights and Limits

The rights conferred by a licence are narrower than those available under a concession:

  • Operational permission to generate, distribute or extract within the licence perimeter, but no automatic right to third-party infrastructure, ports or export corridors.
  • Limited land rights, the licence does not typically authorise expropriation. Land access must be negotiated separately, often through lease agreements with landholders or community consultation processes.
  • No automatic fiscal stabilisation, the licence holder is fully subject to the prevailing statutory tax and royalty regime, including any future legislative changes.
  • Administrative dispute resolution as default, unless the developer separately negotiates an arbitration clause (for example, within a power purchase agreement or an investment contract), disputes are resolved through Guinea’s administrative and judicial system.

Typical Obligations

Licence holders face reporting obligations, activity-based royalties, surface fees and compliance with applicable environmental standards. Development timelines are imposed as permit conditions, but historically they were enforced more leniently than concession milestones, a dynamic that changed sharply in 2025 when the government revoked scores of licences for inactivity. The energy sector legal framework now treats licence non-compliance with the same severity as concession breaches.

Overall, the licence route is cheaper to enter but offers less protection against political, fiscal and regulatory risk. For projects that do not require expropriation, export access or long-term fiscal certainty, this trade-off may be acceptable.

Concession vs Licence in Guinea: Side-by-Side Comparison

The following table distils the core decision dimensions into a direct comparison. Each cell reflects the typical position under Guinean law and recent practice; individual projects may vary depending on negotiated terms.

Dimension Concession (state grant / contract) Exploitation Licence (permit)
Legal form & issuance Bilateral concession agreement issued by decree; requires ministerial recommendation and National Mining Commission approval. Administrative permit issued by regulator or minister; standard application process.
Typical duration Long-term (often 25–50 years; renewable by contract). Shorter / project-life terms with periodic renewals.
Rights (land / expropriation / export) Broad, negotiated land access, expropriation facilitation, port and export rights often included. Narrow, rights tied to permitted activities; limited expropriation powers; no automatic export access.
Eligibility / conversion Requires Guinean-incorporated company or local JV; convertible from an exploration permit after meeting obligations. Easier entry for defined operations; conversion to concession possible but not automatic.
Upfront & recurring costs Higher negotiation and transaction costs; surface royalties at higher bands; may include signature bonuses. Lower upfront fees; lower statutory surface fees; standard application costs.
Tax & royalty exposure Subject to negotiated terms; may include fiscal stabilisation clauses freezing rates for the concession term. Fully subject to statutory tax and royalty regime; no stabilisation unless separately negotiated.
Development obligations Strict investment and construction milestones embedded in the agreement. Permit conditions include timelines; historically enforced administratively, now enforced aggressively.
Enforceability & revocation risk Revocable for non-performance via contract and administrative power; revocation observed in 2025. Revocable; heavy penalties and revocations recorded throughout 2025 enforcement wave.
Penalties for inactivity Monthly penalties, forfeiture, revocation clauses, can be steep under the agreement and the Mining Code. Administrative fines and accruing penalties; revocation for inactivity actively enforced since 2025.
Dispute resolution Investor-state arbitration (ICSID/ICC) if negotiated in the concession agreement. Administrative remedy first; arbitration only if separately agreed in ancillary contracts.

Dimension-by-Dimension Analysis

Tax and Fiscal Implications

The most consequential fiscal difference between a concession vs licence in Guinea is stabilisation. A concession agreement can include clauses that freeze or cap corporate income tax rates, mining taxes, customs duties and VAT for the duration of the project. Licences offer no such shield, holders are fully exposed to legislative changes in Guinea’s tax code, which the transitional government has shown willingness to revise. Withholding tax on dividends, interest and management fees applies under both instruments, but concession holders may negotiate reduced rates or exemptions for the initial development phase. For energy projects reliant on imported equipment, the VAT and customs treatment negotiated within a concession can materially reduce capital costs during construction.

Cost Comparison

The table below summarises the key cost differentials. Note that some published figures originate from mining-sector practice guides; energy-sector concession fees are individually negotiated and may differ.

Cost item Concession Exploitation Licence
Surface royalty per km² USD 150/km² (reported mining concession band; energy concessions negotiated individually) USD 10/km² (exploration permit baseline; exploitation licences at lower statutory rates)
Annual fixed fees / registration Typically higher; may include signature bonuses Typically lower statutory fees
Penalty exposure for inactivity Monthly penalties accruing under agreement + Mining Code; steep and enforced Administrative fines + accrual; revocation has occurred (May 2025 wave)
Transaction costs (legal / negotiation) Higher, negotiation of bespoke agreement, stabilisation, PPA, land instruments Lower, standard application process, statutory permits

Surface royalty bands are reported by international practice guides covering Guinea’s mining sector. The surface royalty increases for subsequent renewal periods under both instruments. The headline Guinea concession cost is higher, but developers must weigh that against the fiscal stabilisation savings and reduced political risk over a multi-decade project life. For a large IPP, the net-present-value benefit of a stabilised tax rate routinely outweighs the higher upfront transaction costs of a concession.

Timing and Permitting Timeline

Timing is where the licence holds its clearest advantage. A standard exploitation licence application can move from submission to ministerial approval in a matter of months, assuming complete documentation and no regulatory objections. A concession negotiation, including drafting the agreement, obtaining National Mining Commission approval, securing the ministerial recommendation and issuing the presidential or ministerial decree, typically takes substantially longer, often exceeding twelve months and sometimes stretching to two years for complex energy infrastructure projects.

This timeline gap has direct financing implications. Development finance institutions and commercial lenders generally prefer projects structured under long-term concessions with embedded arbitration clauses, because these instruments provide the bankable certainty needed for non-recourse or limited-recourse project finance. A licence-based project may reach permitting faster but face delays at financial close if lenders require additional contractual protections that the licence alone does not provide.

Liability, Land and Third-Party Rights

A concession provides the stronger platform for projects that require expropriation, third-party infrastructure access or port/export rights. The concession agreement can authorise the state to facilitate land acquisition on the concessionaire’s behalf and can embed access rights to roads, rail corridors and port facilities. Published concession agreements, such as the GAC bauxite concession viewable on the ResourceContracts database, include detailed annexes on infrastructure sharing, corridor access and export logistics.

An exploitation licence, by contrast, confers no automatic expropriation or infrastructure-access rights. The licence holder must negotiate land leases directly with surface-rights owners and secure separate government approvals for any infrastructure beyond the project perimeter. For energy projects that require transmission line corridors, substation access or fuel-supply logistics, this limitation can create material delay and cost risk.

Enforceability, Penalties and Revocation Risk

This dimension has dominated investor risk analysis since mid-2025. On May 16, 2025, Reuters reported that Guinea’s military government repossessed 51 mining licences in a single enforcement action targeting claims and concessions where operations had either not commenced or were significantly underutilised. Earlier that month, industry outlets reported the withdrawal of Kebo Energy SA’s mining concession and the cancellation of EGA’s mining licence. By late May 2025, the government had cancelled an additional 129 exploration permits.

Penalties for inactivity in Guinea accrue under the Mining Code, industry reporting references Articles 112–120 as the primary enforcement provisions, and under the specific terms of individual concession agreements. Non-compliance triggers accruing financial penalties, and persistent inactivity can lead to outright revocation of both permits and concessions. Guinea has also faced international arbitration claims following revocations, indicating that concession holders with arbitration clauses retain some recourse, but the process is costly and the outcome uncertain.

Practical mitigation strategies for concession enforceability in Guinea include: negotiating meaningful cure periods and force majeure provisions; structuring development milestones as bankable and achievable; maintaining performance bonds proportionate to milestone obligations; securing step-in rights for lenders; and building early-stage community and government relations to reduce the likelihood of an adverse administrative finding.

Regulatory Burden and Local Content Compliance

Guinea’s 2022 Local Content Law imposes stringent obligations on foreign investors: mandatory collaboration with Guinean companies, progressive local procurement targets, and employment quotas for Guinean nationals. These requirements apply to both concessions and licences, but the compliance mechanism differs. Under a concession, local-content targets are typically embedded directly in the agreement, giving the concessionaire a negotiated, fixed schedule that provides some predictability. Under a licence, local-content obligations are imposed by statute and can be adjusted by regulation without the holder’s consent. For projects operating in Guinea, early local-content planning is essential regardless of the chosen instrument.

What Changed in 2026: How the 2025 Enforcement Wave Alters the Calculus

The enforcement events of May–June 2025 represent a structural shift in Guinea’s regulatory posture, not an isolated incident. The transitional government revoked or repossessed well over 100 permits and concessions within a matter of weeks, sending a clear signal that inactivity, non-compliance with development schedules, and failure to meet community or fiscal obligations would no longer be tolerated.

Industry observers expect this enforcement posture to persist through 2026 and beyond. The likely practical effect is threefold. First, the risk premium for Guinea projects has increased, lenders and equity investors now demand stronger contractual protections, including robust cure periods, force majeure definitions, and lender step-in rights that were previously treated as optional enhancements. Second, the traditional assumption that a licence is “safer because it is simpler” no longer holds: licences were revoked at least as aggressively as concessions in the 2025 wave.

Third, the concession route has gained relative attractiveness for large projects because it offers a negotiated, bilateral framework with identifiable dispute-resolution mechanisms, an advantage that becomes far more valuable when the government is actively exercising its enforcement powers.

Guinea also faces international arbitration proceedings following certain revocations, which early indications suggest could influence how aggressively the government proceeds with future enforcement actions against concession holders that have international arbitration protections. For licence holders without such protections, the enforcement calculus is less favourable.

Decision Framework: When to Choose a Concession vs Licence in Guinea

Choose a concession when:

  • Your project requires negotiated land access, expropriation facilitation, or port and export rights.
  • You need contractual fiscal stabilisation to underwrite a multi-decade investment horizon.
  • Lenders or equity investors require investor-state arbitration as a condition of financing.
  • The project is large-scale (utility-scale IPP, major hydropower, port-linked infrastructure) with heavy capital expenditure and a long payback period.
  • You can absorb the higher upfront transaction costs and longer negotiation timeline in exchange for a stronger contractual position.

Choose a licence when:

  • You need a faster permitting path for a smaller generation plant, captive power facility or limited-scope operation.
  • The project does not require expropriation, export access or third-party infrastructure rights.
  • You prefer lower upfront transaction costs and can accept full exposure to the statutory tax and royalty regime.
  • Your financing structure does not require embedded arbitration or fiscal stabilisation.
  • You plan to convert to a concession at a later stage once feasibility and development milestones are established.
If your priority is… Choose…
Maximum contractual protection and arbitration Concession
Speed to permitting Licence
Fiscal stabilisation over 20+ years Concession
Lowest upfront cost Licence
Land expropriation / export corridor rights Concession
Flexibility to scale before committing to long-term obligations Licence (with planned conversion)
Non-recourse project finance from DFIs Concession

When to Engage a Lawyer for the Concession vs Licence Decision

Engaging experienced Guinea energy counsel early, before committing to either route, is not optional in the current enforcement environment. The following milestones should each trigger a consultation with qualified legal advisors:

  • Pre-feasibility stage: when you are evaluating whether to pursue a concession or licence and need a jurisdiction-specific risk assessment aligned to your project structure.
  • Before licence application: to ensure the application is complete, correctly categorised, and accompanied by the required environmental and social documentation.
  • At concession negotiation (term-sheet stage): to structure fiscal stabilisation, arbitration, land-access and milestone provisions before the government’s negotiating position hardens.
  • During PPA, land and port-access negotiations: to align the concession or licence terms with the power purchase agreement, land instruments and any infrastructure-sharing arrangements.
  • Pre-financial close: to satisfy lender due diligence requirements, confirm enforceability of security packages, and document step-in rights and cure mechanisms.

Given the 2025 enforcement wave, sponsors should also engage counsel immediately upon receiving any government notice questioning compliance, requesting information, or signalling intent to invoke penalty or revocation provisions.

Need Legal Advice?

This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact Aboubacar Sidiki Kanté at ASK AVOCATS, a member of the Global Law Experts network.

Sources

  1. Guinea Contracts, Ministère des Mines (Official Contract Database)
  2. Reuters, Guinea Repossesses 51 Mining Licences (May 16, 2025)
  3. AL Circle, Why Is Guinea Revoking Bauxite Mining Licences or Withdrawing Concessions
  4. Shanghai Metals Market, Guinea Warns That Non-Compliance Now Means Losing the Licence
  5. Mayer Brown, Guinea Mining Know-How (Surface Royalties and Fees)
  6. LEX Africa, Guinea-Conakry Mining Guide (2022)
  7. Chambers Practice Guides, Mining 2026: Guinea
  8. Chambers, Guinea: A General Business Law Overview (Local Content Law 2022)
  9. ResourceContracts, Guinea Concession Agreements (Bauxite)
  10. Bilaterals.org, Guinea Faces Second Arbitration Over Revoked Concessions

FAQs

Should I apply for a concession or an exploitation licence for a hydropower or energy project in Guinea?
It depends on project scale, financing requirements and the rights you need. Large-scale projects requiring land expropriation, fiscal stabilisation and lender-required arbitration should pursue a concession. Smaller, faster-track projects with limited infrastructure needs are better suited to a licence. See the decision framework above for a full mapping of project attributes to the recommended instrument.
A licence has lower upfront and transaction costs. However, a concession may be cheaper on a net-present-value basis for long-duration projects because fiscal stabilisation clauses protect against future tax increases. The cost comparison table in this guide sets out the key differentials, including surface royalties, annual fees and penalty exposure.
Yes, and it has done so aggressively. In May 2025, the government repossessed 51 mining licences and subsequently cancelled 129 exploration permits. Concessions have also been withdrawn. Mitigation requires negotiated cure periods, achievable milestones, performance bonds, and, for concession holders, investor-state arbitration clauses that provide recourse outside the domestic system.
In practice, yes, provided those rights are expressly negotiated and embedded in the concession agreement. A concession can authorise expropriation facilitation, port access and export corridor rights. An exploitation licence does not confer these automatically; they must be secured through separate agreements and government approvals.
Conversion is possible under Guinean law but is not automatic. A licence holder who has met prescribed exploration or development obligations may apply for a concession. The application requires a fresh approval process through the National Mining Commission and the relevant ministry. Developers planning a phased approach, licence first, concession later, should structure early-stage obligations with the conversion criteria explicitly in mind.
Engage counsel at the pre-feasibility stage, before you commit to either instrument. Additional critical milestones include: before any licence application, at the concession term-sheet negotiation stage, during PPA and land negotiations, and before financial close. In the current enforcement environment, any government notice regarding compliance or penalties should trigger immediate legal engagement.
The 2022 Local Content Law applies to both instruments, imposing procurement, employment and localisation obligations. Under a concession, these obligations are typically negotiated and embedded in the agreement with fixed schedules. Under a licence, they are imposed by statute and can be adjusted by regulation. For planning certainty, the concession route provides a more predictable local-content compliance framework.
Penalties for inactivity in Guinea include accruing monthly fines under the Mining Code and under the specific terms of concession agreements. Persistent inactivity can lead to forfeiture and revocation. The 2025 enforcement wave demonstrated that these provisions are actively enforced, multiple companies lost permits and concessions for failing to meet development timelines or operational commitments.

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Concession vs Licence in Guinea (2026): Which Is Right for Your Energy or Infrastructure Project?

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