ISLAMABAD: Students of Balochistan province would soon get a full-fledged university to get higher education in the field of minerals and natural resources as the authorities concerned are making steady progress on the project.

The ‘Umer Khan Sanjrani Minerals and Natural Resources University’ would be established in Nok Kundi, Chaghi area of the province on 500 acres of land at an estimated cost of Rs6 billion, a senior official aware of the project developments told APP.

He said the PC-II of the university project had already been approved by the Central Development Working Party (CDWP), while services of a consultant were hired for the feasibility study of the construction work.

The consultant, hired through the tendering process, would complete the feasibility of the project within the next few weeks after visiting the site, reviewing the nature of the construction work and other related matters.

The official said the Project Review Report would be submitted to the quarters concerned in the coming days, whereas a final report about the commencement of the construction work to be completed by March 5, 2021.

The university, he said, would prove to be a milestone in imparting quality education and producing skilled youth in the field of minerals.

Replying to a question, the official said the federal government was also working on an effective strategy to identify the unexplored potential of the minerals that existed in Balochistan province, which possesses a variety of valuable ore resources.

Accordingly, he said, an approval had recently been granted for setting up a new public sector company in the province to accelerate minerals’ exploration activities, besides giving a task to the Geological Survey of Pakistan (GSP) to map 50 Toposheets of ‘outcrop area’ to identify hidden resources in Balochistan.

“The new entity titled ‘Balochistan Mineral Exploration Company Limited (BMEC) ‘will be a joint venture of the Federal and Balochistan governments with 10 per cent and 90 per cent shares respectively.”

Highlighting the company prospects, he said a part of continental-scale Tethyan Copper Belt was located in Chaghi district of the province that had tremendous economic mineral potential as “a number of promising ore deposits including of copper (along with associated gold and silver), iron, lead and zinc have already been discovered.”

This year, the official said, the federal government had allocated Rs20 million in the Public Sector Development Programme (PSDP 2020-21) for geological mapping of the 50 Toposheets, out of 354 unmapped Toposheets of Balochistan.

The geological maps provide a bird’s eye view of the surface and (subsurface) distribution of various types of rocks and economic minerals that are found in a particular region.—APP