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Copper mining, like politics, is now the art of the possible

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19th century German statesman Otto von Bismarck famously said: “Politics is the art of the possible, the attainable – the art of the next best.”

Mining is fast becoming a similar endeavour. More than ever, politics is seeping into all aspects of the industry. Mining, already at the mercy of the business cycle and ever more volatile pricing, is also increasingly exposed to the shifting sands of politics.

In a recent note, Goldman Sachs summed up the changing nature of the industry in the context of copper this way:

“…fundamentals were once so connected to global growth, copper has been viewed as having a ‘PhD’ in macroeconomics.

“Yet today, ‘Dr. Copper’ no longer exists – with ESG, geopolitics and chronic underinvestment all driving copper fundamentals far more than overall global growth.

“In our view, Copper’s PhD is in public policy, not economics, rallying on concerns of Chilean mining royalties, accelerating European renewables demand and Russian sanctions supply risks rather than falling global growth expectations.”

Possible is the new probable

Resources may be measured or indicated, reserves may still be labelled proven and probable, but developing deposits has only become more uncertain.

In a presentation at copper mining’s biggest annual gathering in Santiago, CRU head of base metal supply, Erik Heimlich, pointed out that while the size of the long-term supply gap of just over 6 million tonnes is in line with historical trends, filling that gap is a much more daunting prospect today.

Source: CRU

Foremost is the fact that now, remarkably, half the project pipeline for needed supply in 2032 consists of greenfield projects in the possible category; another 19% are speculative brownfield projects

Comparing the 2022 project pipeline with that of 2012 makes for sobering reading. Of the 8 million tonnes per annum capacity identified as greenfield — possible projects 7 million tonnes remain undeveloped.

Heimlich says the preponderance of projects only rated as possible in the pipeline indicates the extent to which “factors beyond project economics are playing an increasingly significant role” in determining whether projects become mines.

How brown was your valley?

Only about a third of the 2012 uncommitted brownfield projects, which should be quicker, easier and cheaper to build, are in production or under construction now.

Notable 2012 projects that stayed so include Anglo American and Glencore’s $6.5 billion Collahuasi expansion, which was supposed to lift production at the Chile mine above 1m tonnes and BHP’s Olympic Dam project that started as “the mother of all digs” and ended up as an exercise in debottlenecking.

If new projects are more miss than hit, it’s up to mine life extensions, operational efficiency projects and mine restarts to make up the difference, but Heimlich cautions that while the “capital intensity of debottlenecking project may be attractive, additional tonnage is general low” and lack of scale can make these projects not worthwhile.

The success of mine restarts is also patchy, with few mines re-entering production and those that do generally small-scale.

Stopping stoping

Given the difficulty in bringing more projects online, mine life extensions “in this cycle appear to be more necessary than ever”, says Heimlich, but even these projects can fall foul of environmental, regulatory, community and political developments.

Anglo American has had to scale down its $3 billion Los Bronces project for environmental reasons, and will employ the sub-level stoping method in order to have no surface impact in an area with many glaciers, but doing so means significantly lower ore extraction than with block caving or open-pit operations.

And that may still not be enough for a green light – just this week Chile’s environment regulator denied the project an extension permit.

Tech tonic

Can technology plug the gap? Heimlich says new leach processes are “attracting significant interest and investment” and the total addressable market for low-grade sulphide leaching equals around 10 years of current output.

“New technologies provide the most significant upside to long-term production but could be beyond the requisite timeframe.”

Much like all those green, brown, possible, probable, committed and uncommitted projects that go beyond requisite timeframes.

Mining 

Exchange rate crisis weighs down RioZim

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PRODUCTION at listed multi-asset mining concern, RioZim, was affected by exchange rate distortions during the year ended December 31, 2021.

The firm said operations were affected by power outages across its mines, along with policy inconsistencies.

The firm reported a 7% decline in gold output, but revenue increased by 84% to $5,8 billion, chairperson Saleem Rashid Beebeejaun said in a commentary to the company’s financial statements.

RioZim reported $3,1 billion revenue during the same period in 2020.

The RioZim chairperson cited an unfavourable operating environment for the drop in output.

“The operating environment throughout the year was challenging,” he said.

“It was characterised by significant exchange rate distortions, ongoing power supply deficits and policy changes among other challenges, which negatively impacted the operations of the group,” the RioZim boss added.

He said the COVID-19 pandemic presented further challenges to a macroeconomic environment that was already volatile.

“The foreign currency retention was revised downwards to 60% in January 2021 from 70% in the prior year. This not only reduced the value realised for the group’s gold produce but also negatively impacted the timeous execution of the group’s projects, which predominantly required foreign currency,” he added.

Rashid Beebeejaun was referring to a foreign currency retention policy where exporters surrender part of their US dollar earnings in foreign currency, with the rest coming in Zimbabwe dollars at the prevailing exchange rate.

“This continued to put pressure on the group’s profitability as inputs tracked rates on the alternative market. The combination of a challenging operating environment and the delays to the completion of the BIOX plant project due to inadequate foreign currency resulted in the company incurring a loss for the year,” Beebeejaun said.

He said gold production, declined by 7% from 1 205kg produced in the prior year to 1 122kg.

He said due to delays in the completion of the BIOX plant project, the lifespan of the stopgap One-Step mining operation was extended and continued to supply ore to RioZim’s Cam & Motor plant.

Beebeejaun said production at Renco Mine, another RioZim asset, dropped by 3% because of reduced plant throughput as a result of increased power cuts.

Production at Dalny Mine improved by 6% as a result of increased plant throughput.

Gold production at its One-Step Mine fell by 18% from the prior year’s production of 427kg to 351kg as a result  of  lower grades.

The RioZim chairperson said there was no gold production from Cam & Motor Mine during the year as it continued with the construction of its BIOX plant project.

Diamond production at the group’s associate, RZM Murowa, declined by 28% to 414 000 carats, from 579 000 carats produced during the comparative period in 2020.

Beebeejaun said RioZim was engaging with potential financiers for its 178 megawatt solar plant project.

He added that discussions were progressing at a slower pace as a result of the complexities brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic.

On the  2 800 megawatt  Sengwa Power  Station, he said due to a mix of considerations brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic, the company had put up various financing options to attract potential investors to the project.

 

 

Newsday

Premier Africa Minerals chairperson steps down

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Premier African Minerals chairperson Neil Herbert has resigned from the board with immediate effect.

Herbert, who joined the company as non-executive chairperson in 2020, has left the board to pursue other business interests including his recent appointment as executive chairperson of Atlantic.

“Herbert rejoined the Premier board at a critical time in the rejuvenation of the company and I express my thanks and appreciation for this,” Premier chief executive officer George Roach said in a statement last week.

“Herbert leaves the board to pursue his other business interests including his recent appointment as executive chairman of Atlantic Lithium. I have agreed to act for a limited period as the interim chairman,” he said.

Roach said Premier was in consultation with eligible candidates and would announce further corporate changes in the near future.

Herbert left the company after it had just signed a joint venture agreement with Li3 Resources Inc to acquire 50% interest in Premier’s lithium assets located in Mutare.

The London Stock Exchange-listed resource group acquired the claims located in the Mutare Greenstone Belt in 2020 and were held by the company’s subsidiary LicoMex Private Limited.

Li3 Resources is a private lithium-focused exploration company founded and backed by senior mining executives who have had prior success in the lithium sector.

Herbert was appointed director of the company on August 28, 2019.

He has nearly three decades experience in finance. He trained with PwC and has been involved in growing mining ventures, both as an executive (including Antofagasta plc, Brancote Holdings plc and UraMin Inc) and as a manager of investments (including Galahad Gold plc and Polo Resources Limited).

Herbert has served as a director of several stock exchange-listed companies across the world and was previously a director of Premier between August 20, 2013 and April 22, 2016.

He is also chairperson of IronRidge Resources, Helium One, Siderian Resource Capital and is the acting chairperson of MN Holding Limited and its subsidiaries which operate Otjozondu.

Premier is a multi-commodity mining and natural resource development company focused on southern Africa with its RHA Tungsten and Zulu Lithium projects in Zimbabwe.

The company has a diverse portfolio of projects, which include tungsten, rare earth
elements, lithium and tantalum.

 

 

Newsday

SRK Consulting unpacks critical opportunities and challenges facing the African mining sector

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SRK Consulting has built deep experience working in the African mining sector and has developed a firm grasp of where potential opportunities are and some of the critical challenges preventing the industry from contributing to local economies to its fullest potential.

The Northern Miner’s senior reporter, Henry Lazenby, catches up with SRK Consulting director and principal consultant Andrew van Zyl and Pengfei Xiao, managing director of SRK Consulting in China, to learn more.

A: Andrew van Zyl – While contributing relatively little to the carbon emissions that have hastened climate change, African countries are significantly contributing to supplying the minerals for a global energy transition. This is mainly through the production of copper and cobalt in central Africa and platinum group metals in southern Africa. The Democratic Republic of Congo, for instance, is a leading producer of cobalt and tantalum.

Q&A: SRK Consulting unpacks critical opportunities and challenges facing the African mining sector
SRK Consulting director and principal consultant Andrew van Zyl. (Photography by Jeremy Glyn for SRK in February 2021).

That said, only a minority of African countries have extensive mining sectors, and many of these do not include battery minerals as such. Where these minerals exist in economic quantities, governments have generally provided the necessary frameworks for the private sector to explore and develop them. Increasingly, laws and policies are also evolving to ensure that investments in mining projects have the best possible impacts on host countries and local communities.

Northern Miner

 

Good times are ahead for lithium miners as prices continue to surge

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Good times are ahead for producers of lithium, the battery material that’s key to the electrification of transportation.

Albemarle Corp., the world’s No. 1 miner of the silvery, white metal, boosted profit forecasts for the year as lithium prices soar due to demand from electric vehicles. The third biggest miner, Livent Corp., did the same.
The popularity of electric vehicles has driven prices for battery metals sharply higher, even sparking fears of shortages of materials like lithium, cobalt and nickel. Lithium supplies are a concern in particular because there’s no substitution for it in electric vehicle batteries. A gauge of lithium prices more than doubled in the first four months of this year after surging 280% last year.

Albemarle raised its profit and sales guidance for the full year, citing pricing in its lithium and bromine businesses. The Charlotte, North Carolina-based company’s first-quarter earnings also topped expectations. Shares jumped as much as 19% to $256.46 in after-market trading.

Livent almost doubled its 2022 earnings guidance on higher price assumptions for the year. Shares rose as much as 31% to $28.62 Wednesday, the biggest intraday gain on record.

Bloomberg 

Tharisa plans a US$50m bond listing on VFEX to develop new Zimbabwe mine

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Tharisa, the South African company developing a platinum mine in Zimbabwe, plans to sell US$50 million of bonds on the Victoria Falls Stock Exchange to help finance the project.

The miner last month announced a US$250 million first phase investment in Karo mine, expected to begin development later this year.

“While the financing solution for the development of the Karo Platinum project is well advanced, Karo Platinum is seeking to tap the capital markets in Zimbabwe to part finance this impactful development,” Ilja Graulich, Tharisa’s head of investor relations, said Wednesday.

The miner plans to offer the bond by the second half of this year. It would be the first debt listing on the exchange.

The bourse in Victoria Falls opened in October 2020. It has just four listings: SeedCo, Caledonia Mining Corporation, Bindura Nickel Corporation, and Padenga Holdings. Known as VFEX, it offers tax exemptions on capital gains and promises investors the ability to repatriate funds from a country where foreign exchange is typically in short supply.

A VFEX-listed exporter is allowed to keep 100% of what they earn from any incremental output above its monthly average.

Tharisa’s planned sale adds to similar proposals by the government to begin trading debt on the VFEX, said Justin Bgoni, the chief executive officer of the exchange.

“It will allow a creation of a yield curve on VFEX, provide alternative investment and more importantly show that VFEX is a credible capital raising platform,” he said.

Zimbabwe’s Great Dyke holds the world’s second-largest PGM deposits, and gives producers the lowest-cost platinum and good skills, Tharisa CEO CEO Phoevos Pouroulis said in April as he announced development plans for Karo.

Karo will produce 150,000 ounces of platinum group metals in its first phase and will have a 20-year life. It joins other mines on the Great Dyke. Zimplats produces 580,000 ounces per year, Unki 190,000 ounces and Mimosa 120,000 ounces. Great Dyke Investments’ delayed Darwendale project will, on completion, be the largest producer, at 860,000oz per year.

Bloomberg (additional reporting by newZWire)

Gold operations anchors Padenga revenue growth

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Listed diversified group, Padenga Holdings Limited’s revenue grew 10% to US$78.5m in the reviewed period from US$71.6m achieved in the previous year on the positive performance in the gold mining division.

The uptick in revenue comes when the crocodile and the alligator businesses faced reduced demand and changing market dynamics.
Padenga recently acquired a controlling stake in Dallaglio group, which contributed 66% to the total revenue while Zimbabwe crocodiles contributed 31%. Texas alligators contributed 3%.

“Solid group revenue performance was largely driven by exceptional contribution from the mining operations. This follows the on-line commissioning of the new Eureka Gold Mine in Guruve in October 2021. The
Eureka Gold Mine achieved its plant nameplate capacity seven weeks earlier than forecast on November 25, 2021,
” board chairman, Thembinkosi Sibanda said.

The mining division made an operating profit of US$8.4m. There was a 43% increase in operating costs and the mining business generated positive cash flows of US$10.1m from its operations that contributed to working capital relief.

“Gold volumes for the Dallaglio group are therefore anticipated to increase 25% during 2022 with a concomitant 20% reduction in the all in sustaining costs per ounce produced . This will increase margins and
enhance profitability. Eureka produced 976kgs which was an improvement from 722kgs in the prior year, ” Sibanda said.

He said the mining sector picked up its pace in the second half of the year as Eureka made its successful commercial production volume in September 2021 following its official opening on October 21, 2021 by President Emmerson Mnangagwa.

Despite growth in revenue, Padenga, however, plunged into a US$7.4m loss from a profit of US$3.2m achieved in the previous year.
Total assets stood at US$169.8m from US$151m in 2020.

 

Business Times

ZMF calls for registration of Semi Precious and Gemstones stakeholders

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RE: GEMSTONES/SEMI- PRECIOUS STONE MINERS/STONE ART/ TRADERS/JEWELLERS DATA BASE.

Reference to the above as well as our previous notice of 28/01/22, May all those who are in the gemstones and semi-precious stones sector provide the following details for data capture as soon as possible, closing date is 06/05/22 at 17: 00 hrs.

1. Full names

2. Mineral mined

3. Business (e.g. trader/jeweler/miner/stone art etc.)

4. Mine registration status (e.g. certificate no./application pending /covered by EPO/reservation

5. Contact details

6. Any requirement/support (e.g. finance $$$/equipment details/ markets/etc.

7. Area or province

Kindly forward the information to the undersigned through WhatsApp or via email below.

The information is to enable an efficient service to your specific businesses as well as for programs to be rolled out soon.

May you kindly share this with those not accessible on whats-app

Yours faithfully
MR PRIVELAGE C. MOYO
Secretary for semi-precious and gemstones
WhatsApp +263 772 936 110
Email: [email protected]

Chitando to commission US$2,5m Vumbachikwe project

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MINES and Mining Development Minister, Winston Chitando, is set to officially commission a Tailings Storage Facility (TSF) project at Vumbachikwe Mine in Gwanda, Matabeleland South Province tomorrow.

The US$2,5 million initiative is expected to ensure sustainable mining operations for the next two decades, management said.

Already Vumbachikwe Mine has poured in significant investment towards the project, which will see the company taking the lead in environmentally friendly mining practices at a time when many companies the world over are being taken to task for environmental pollution in an increasingly climate conscious world.

“As a major player in our endeavour to put all hands on deck and create a US$12 billion gold mining industry for Zimbabwe by the year 2023 as espoused by President Emmerson Mnangagwa in the national vision, we ought to also keep an eye on our carbon footprint because we have to bequeath not only a wealthy nation but an environmentally safe nation for future generations,” said Vumbachikwe acting mine manager, Mr None Kananji.

“As a result, our stakeholders invested in this project to ensure that as we heed Government’s call for collective patriotic pursuit of a middle-income nation by the year 2030, we also don’t lose sight of the need to ensure the land from which we benefit is preserved.”

TSFs are one or more dams, which ensure that effluent from mining and extraction processes, which may contain slime and chemicals with potential to contaminate underground water and the environment, are stored safely.

In recent times, the Environmental Management Agency (EMA) has been scaling up efforts to make mining companies comply with waste management regulations.

The minister’s imminent visit is, therefore, seen as an endorsement of the proactive move by Vumbachikwe as well as encouragement to similar operations to emulate the step taken by the mine, which is currently implementing a raft of measures to restructure and boost production by plugging production leaks and supporting national vision.

 

 

The Chronicle

Gold mine tussle takes new twist…lawyers demand return of evicted Ran Mine workers

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LAWYERS representing scores of workers and their families who were recently evicted from Bindura-based Ran Mine were last week making frantic efforts to secure their return.

Ran Mine Private Limited, a gold asset that has been at the centre of a protracted dispute between Zimbabwean investors, lurched into fresh controversy after evicting the former workers saying they were retrenched and paid their packages about 20 years ago.

Lawyers estimated that 500 people were affected by the eviction.

Last month, new investors for the operation secured a High Court order to evict the workers.

In an interview with NewsDay Business, the workers’ lawyer Obey Shava of the Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights said there was an appeal that was pending at the High Court before authorities moved in to execute the order.

“Before the granting of eviction order by the High Court, we made an appeal to the High Court and is still pending,” Shava said.

“We are still pursuing it, which is the status of the matter.  At the moment we are clueless if I am to tell the truth,” he said.

“We are trying to appeal to organisations and the public who can possibly assist but we haven’t found any relief so far since the eviction process took place,” he added.

There has been a wrangle over asset ownership since Blackgate Investments, led by businesswoman Angeline Munyeza, also claimed ownership of the rich goldfield.

Fighting over the asset reached  tipping point late last year when G&P Industries said it was pressing ahead to extract its first bullion at the mine in 22 years.

Blackgate warned that sinking shafts at the operation was illegal until government made a determination over ownership of the mine, which hit headlines in 2020, when 30 artisanal miners perished in flooded shafts.

Court documents indicate that on March 31, Munyeza escalated her battle to Chief Justice Luke Malaba, seeking his urgent intervention.

She has previously written to President Emmerson Mnangagwa, the Zimbabwe Anti-Corruption Commission and the Ministry of Mines and Mining Development seeking resolution of the dispute.

The businesswoman has produced evidence that she also holds titles to the mine.

But around the time she approached the Chief Justice, her rivals were moving to evict former workers out of the mine compound.

Rights groups and the ruling Zanu PF party estimates show that up to 500 families have been affected by the evictions, although the court case lists 18 representatives of the former workers.

“Despite demand, it is alleged the 18 defendants refused to vacate the mine houses”, High Court papers said.

“The defendants (former workers) failed to discharge the onus upon them to show an entitlement to continue holding on to the houses”, the court papers added.

“The defendants and all persons claiming occupation through them and all other persons in use, possession and control of any part of the Ran Mine compound without the consent of Ran Mine shall forthwith vacate the compound,” the High Court ruled.

“Failing vacation, the Sheriff, with the assistance of the Zimbabwe Republic Police, if necessary, is authorised to eject the defendants and all persons claiming occupation through them and all other persons in use, possession and control of any part of the Ran Mine compound without consent of the plaintiff” the ruling said.

 

Newsday