INTIEAPeru · Law 28.258 on Mining Royalties, as amendedPolicyIn force

Law 28.258 on Mining Royalties, as amended

In 2004, Peru adopted Law 28.258 to regulate mining royalties. In the same year, this law was amended by Law 28323 . According to this regulation, a mining royalty is a payment made by the mining licensee to the State as an economic compensation for the exploitation of mineral…

Last changed 4 years ago.

Extracted view for reading · Original for compliance evidence

Lifecycle

  1. Effective
  2. Last change

Country / jurisdiction: Peru · Year: 2004 · Status: In force · Level: National · Type: Voluntary

In 2004, Peru adopted Law 28.258 to regulate mining royalties. In the same year, this law was amended by Law 28323 .

According to this regulation, a mining royalty is a payment made by the mining licensee to the State as an economic compensation for the exploitation of mineral resources.

Article 8 of the updated version of law 28.258 requires the State to distribute the funds collected from mining royalties according to the following geographical divisions:

20% to the district/s where the natural resource is exploited, with a further requirement that 50% of this distribution has to be invested in the specific communities where the natural resource is exploited;

20% to the province or provinces where the natural resource is being exploited;

40% to the district and provincial municipalities of the Region department or departments where the natural resource is in exploitation;

15% to the regional government(s) where the natural resource is being exploited; and

5% to the national universities from the region where the natural resource is exploited.

Further, article 9 provides: “The resources that the Regional Governments and Municipalities receive as mining royalties’ payment will be used exclusively to fund or co-fund investment projects that link mining to the economic development of each region ensuring the sustainable development of urban and rural areas. The resources that the national universities receive because of royalties will be destined exclusively to invest in scientific and technological research.”

Official source: https://www2.congreso.gob.pe/sicr/cendocbib/con4_uibd.nsf/1002BCF7DCFACAE705257C200052B47B/$FILE/28258.pdf

Source

https://www.iea.org/policies/15657

Canonical document at the regulator. Always cite this URL — not the Vantage detail page — in compliance evidence.

Related in International

INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44722NewsIn force

How Many Barrels of Oil Do AI Data Centers Consume on a Daily Basis?

Analysis of energy consumption in cryptocurrency mining and AI data centers, estimating Bitcoin mining requires 138-175 terawatt-hours annually, equivalent to 500-600 barrels of oil per coin minted. Article examines growing power demands of blockchain and artificial intelligence infrastructure relative to fossil fuel equivalents.

17 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsrigzone:https://www.rigzone.com/news/wire/oil_drops_as_iran_talks_advance-22-jun-2026-183968-article/?rss=trueNewsIn force

Oil Drops as Iran Talks Advance

Crude oil prices declined following US approval of limited Iranian oil sales, with shipping through the Strait of Hormuz showing signs of recovery.

21 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-news-44726NewsIn force

Greek Energy Pulls In $26B As Europe Scrambles To Replace Russian Gas

Greece is attracting over $26 billion in international investment to position itself as a critical energy transit hub for Central, Eastern, and Southeastern Europe. This investment surge supports the EU's goal to completely phase out Russian gas imports by 2027, with major funds including BlackRock and QIA backing Greece's energy infrastructure development.

23 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-article-44719NewsIn force

The Oil Crisis Is Far From Over

A U.S.-Iran Memorandum of Understanding regarding conflict settlement is unlikely to prevent an imminent energy crisis caused by rapidly depleting global oil and petroleum product inventories. The suspension of tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz during the conflict, which normally carries about 20% of global oil supplies, has depleted strategic reserves that previously acted as market buffers.

23 hours ago
INTEnergy Newsoilprice:oilprice-news-44725NewsIn force

Saudis Turn to Russian Fuel Oil as Iran War Saps Fossil Power Supplies

Saudi Arabia is purchasing significant volumes of Russian fuel oil and vacuum gasoil due to supply disruptions from the Hormuz crisis affecting domestic oil and gas wells. Russian fuel oil exports declined 6% in May to 3.2 million metric tons due to Ukrainian strikes on energy infrastructure, but Saudi demand remains strong amid rising temperatures and domestic power generation needs.

24 hours ago