Categories
beneficiation industrial inputs mining

Beneficiate…but only when it is economic [Business Day column]

Producing more value-added industrial products, on the back of South Africa’s resources, remains a much-sought after policy goal. But it has been so for a while. In this column, I reflect on this policy challenge, after the national budget allocated R2.7bn to beneficiation projects.

FOR someone visiting the US for the first time, Chicago’s magnificent mile might not be the best place to start. Not because that wonderful city, or even that particular neighbourhood, is a terrible place. It just reinforces the stereotypes too easily with its wide avenues dripping with opulence. Browsing through iconic jewellery stores, my enchantment was tempered by the knowledge that SA might produce tons of gold and platinum, but it had no hand in the art and design before my eyes.

This was in the early 2000s and not much has changed since then. At that time, I worked for a gold miner and discussions over the new mining charter were heated. Beneficiation emerged as a stepchild of that process. Mining companies could offset some of their ownership obligations for spending on beneficiation projects. They spent some money on beneficiation projects, and continue to do so, but it would be hard to say that resource-based manufacturing took off.

For more, please go here:http://www.bdlive.co.za/opinion/columnists/2015/03/03/beneficiate–but-only-when-it-is-economic

Categories
mining platinum resource curse

Mining for shared growth

First published at Daily Maverick here

The incoming class of ministers in the economic cluster has been met with quite a hazing. The latest GDP figures indicating a shrinking economy (against the backdrop of rising inflation and job losses), represent a cautionary note for the economic aspirations of this term of government. 

Hopes have been pinned on the beneficiation of mineral resources, that is adding value to commodities instead of shipping them off raw, as an important element of the drive to revitalise the industrial sectors of the economy. The manufacturing sector is also expected to be a source of new jobs. But these same sectors, mining and manufacturing, are the ones that have pulled down the economy in the first quarter.

In the face of the competing narratives about the platinum strike, we can agree that it has wrought devastation to those directly affected by it in the platinum belt communities, and also in the so-called labour-sending areas in the Eastern Cape.
Now the moment of reckoning has come for the rest of us. The economy is now on a path towards recession, and key economic decisions, including those by investors, will be coloured by that fact.
The challenge across the world for resource-rich countries is to find ways to avoid the ‘resource curse’, that paradoxical phenomenon that sees the well-endowed finish last. In our case, the development of one of the most lucrative mining endeavours in history created a few tycoons and a small elite paid well for performing (racially) reserved managerial and artisan jobs; but precious little broad-based development of human capital.
In mining ‘host’ communities, living conditions are no more hospitable that they were before 1994. The ‘labour-sending’ communities are still populated by those Phyllis Ntantala, writing in 1958, termed the “widows of the reserves”, women whose husbands have left for the mines, and who bear the negative social and economic consequences of that activity, with very little to show for it.
In Rehad Desai’s Miners Shot Down, we get to hear from men who shudder at the thought of sending future generations underground but who want to be able to educate their children. This aspiration offends those who subscribe to predatory forms of capitalism. In truth, successful societies are those that create inclusive institutions and economic arrangements that support the growth of a middle class. It should be obvious that even the elite stand to benefit from the upward mobility of the poor. With a combination of better wages and access to quality public goods and services, the children of poor families can go on to meet the critical skills shortage we face, or to become entrepreneurs generating wealth and employment. This not only benefits the private sector but government gains tax revenue whilst communities are strengthened by prospering citizens. Yet sons continue to replace ailing or deceased fathers to work underground in dangerous conditions for low wages.
This was meant to change. The conflict we see in the platinum belt, which traces its causes to the character of mining in this country, should not be happening if the Mining Charter meant anything. In accordance with the charter, sombre commitments were made by mining companies with regards to skills development, housing development and even beneficiation. Yet reviews and impact assessments suggest indifferent or non-existent compliance with the charter. This is not only corporate failure. Of the monies that were in fact handed over to communities, allegations of corruption and misuse abound.
A grand enterprise between government, business, labour and (to some extent) communities came to very little. This is distressing given how many of our challenges require these types of accords. When it comes to the interests of workers and their conditions of employment, or of communities receiving development funding, part of the problem is that those sitting around the table do not fully or properly represent the interests that they claim to serve.
There are many lessons to be had about developing systems of accountability, nipping the unintended consequences of policy in the bud and monitoring the effectiveness of social expenditure. For businesses that thrive on indifferent, ‘tick-box’ compliance with policy and legislation, the message is clear – it will come back to bite you.
The new minister of mineral resources, Ngoako Ramatlhodi, has vowed to resolve the troubles in the platinum belt. That is the immediate challenge. He has also indicated moves to review the policy framework in mining, including the charter. That might be tough news for mining investors who have lived with a policy regime in constant flux. But the status quo is not sustainable.

None will forgive stakeholders in the mining sector if they fail to take this opportunity to create a framework that can deliver human capital development and economic prosperity that is shared from the boardroom to the shaft. Until then, mining poses a downside risk for economic growth, communities will continue to suffer and beneficiation will remain a dream.
Categories
mining

Reaching out to families affected by the platinum strike

Press release from Wits University and other academic and religious leaders:


CALL FOR HUMANITARIAN SUPPORT TO FAMILIES IN THE PLATINUM MINING REGION
There is a humanitarian tragedy unfolding on the platinum belt. While supporting current attempts to reach a settlement to the dispute, the reality on the ground is that children, women and men don’t have food, and hardship will persist after the strike is settled. We cannot allow a situation in which people are starving. No society can tolerate such inhumanity in its midst. It is especially unacceptable 20 years into our democracy.
As a gesture of humanity, we call on all South Africans to assist in stopping the starvation among our poor communities affected by the strike. We appeal to citizens of South Africa to make small and big gestures in support of children, women and men who are affected. In particular, we appeal to South Africans to donate food.
Endorsed by:
The Most Reverend Dr Thabo Makgoba, Archbishop of Cape Town
Bishop Ziphozihle Siwa, Presiding Bishop of the Methodist Church of Southern Africa, President of the South African Council of Churches 
The Right Reverend Dr Johannes Seoka, Bishop of Anglican Diocese of Pretoria, and past president of the South African Council of Churches
Reverend Moss Nthla, Evangelical Alliance of South Africa
Bishop Molefe Ditlhale, Bishop of the Western Diocese of the Evangelical Lutheran Church
Bishop Lunga kaSiboto, Presiding Bishop of the Ethiopian Episcopal Church
Professor Adam Habib, Vice-Chancellor, University of the Witwatersrand
Professor Ihron Rensburg, Vice-Chancellor, University of Johannesburg
Food parcels can be donated at:
1. Gift of the Givers (call toll-free 0800 786911 for details)
2. SkyNet courier branches anywhere in South Africa
3. All campuses of the Universities of Johannesburg and the Witwatersrand
4. Khotso House, 62 Marshall Street, Johannesburg
5. St George’s Cathedral and Anglican Church Warehouse, 12 Plantation Road, Wetton, Cape Town
6. Alternative Information and Development Centre, 129 Rochester Road, Observatory, Cape Town
7. St Albans Anglican Cathedral, Frances Baard Road, Pretoria
Further drop-off points will be announced on the Gift of the Givers website: www.giftofthegivers.org
Bank account details for donations:

ACCOUNT NAME: Gift of the Givers Foundation
ACCOUNT NUMBER: 052137228
BANK: Standard Bank
BRANCH: Pietermaritzburg, South Africa
BRANCH CODE: 057525
SWIFT CODE: SBZAZAJJ
REF: Platinum Strikers

Give online: http://www.giftofthegivers.org/contact-us/online-contributions

For enquiries and comments contact:
Pumeza Magona at +27 (21) 763 1323
Marcus van Wyk at +27 (83) 471 1021
ENDS
Issued by:
KANINA FOSS
Senior Communications Officer
Advancement and Partnerships Division
University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg