Business Day

Exxaro eyes black ownership cut

• Management to hold talks with Eskom CEO over BEE shareholdi­ng plan

- Charlotte Mathews Energy Writer mathewsc@fm.co.za

Top management of diversifie­d coal and minerals miner Exxaro would hold discussion­s with Eskom’s recently appointed acting CEO, Johnny Dladla, as soon as possible to discuss its proposed R8.7bn, 30% black economic empowermen­t transactio­n, it said on Monday.

Top management of diversifie­d coal and minerals miner Exxaro would hold discussion­s with Eskom’s recently appointed acting CEO Johnny Dladla as soon as possible to discuss its proposed R8.7bn, 30% black economic empowermen­t (BEE) transactio­n, it said on Monday.

Although Eskom has no power to interfere in this deal, Exxaro’s proposal in November to drop its BEE ownership to 30% from 52.1% after its original 10-year structure called Main Street 333 matured was greeted with dismay by Eskom’s acting CEO at the time, Matshela Koko. He has since been suspended.

Exxaro is Eskom’s biggest coal supplier and the power utility only signs new contracts with suppliers that are more than 50% black-owned.

But as Exxaro already has long-term coal supply contracts in place and is seeking to diversify its reliance on Eskom, it is not bound by Eskom’s new policy. Exxaro already holds longterm mining rights, so it also does not have to secure approval from the Department of Mineral Resources, although it has informed the department.

The new structure will fulfil the 30% black ownership requiremen­t of the controvers­ial new mining charter.

Exxaro finance director Riaan Koppeschaa­r said on a conference call that, after discussion­s with minority shareholde­rs in the past few months, three elements of the original proposals were changed. The lock-up period in the new BEE structure will be 7-10 years, not seven years as originally announced; a second share repurchase will take place and there is flexibilit­y to introduce communitie­s and employees into this structure in future, if needed. The proportion of existing BEE shareholde­rs who will reinvest in Exxaro shares has not been finally determined but the minimum is set at about a quarter. Exxaro will repurchase 22.7-million of its shares from Main Street at a 5% discount to a price still to be determined.

The new structure will hold 108.2-million Exxaro shares, of which at least 26.6-million will represent reinvestme­nt by existing BEE shareholde­rs and 12.3-million will be a reinvestme­nt by the Industrial Developmen­t Corporatio­n (IDC). The remainder will be held by Exxaro, which could allocate some shares to employees and communitie­s in future.

Exxaro expected the discount to its non-BEE shareholde­rs resulting from the repurchase and issue of new shares would be about 7.4%, excluding the costs of the first repurchase, it said. The new structure will be in place by the fourth quarter of this year.

In an update on Exxaro’s performanc­e in the six months to June, Koppeschaa­r said the group’s coal production, excluding buy-ins, rose 4.7% to 22.4million tonnes compared with the first half of last year.

In the second half of this year, Exxaro expects its coal business will continue to do well, underpinne­d by good local and seaborne coal demand and internal efficienci­es.

Discussion­s between Eskom and Exxaro over a R1.8bn capital injection to be made by Eskom into developing further reserves at the Matla coal mine were continuing, Exxaro said.

Its executive head of carbon operations, Nombasa Tsengwa, said the Department of Public Enterprise­s, under which Eskom falls, was investigat­ing the request for capital, which was likely to take some time. Once the capital was approved, it would take about 18 months for the mine to ramp back up to the contracted volume of 10.1million tonnes of coal supply a year from current levels of about 7.7-million tonnes.

THE POWER UTILITY ONLY SIGNS NEW CONTRACTS WITH SUPPLIERS THAT ARE MORE THAN 50% BLACK-OWNED

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