Business Day

Mantashe not keen to scrap Mining Charter

Minister proposes changes to document Teams to debate transforma­tion, competitiv­eness

- Allan Seccombe Resources Writer

The mining industry’s hopes for a new charter to transform and grow the mining sector were dashed at weekend talks with new Mineral Resources Minister Gwede Mantashe.

Noticeably absent from the talks was the Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union (Amcu), a key player in the industry. It allegedly said it had not received an invitation.

Talks pressed on without the union, an arch rival of the National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM), but it is understood it will be invited to all further sessions.

Amcu president Joseph Mathunjwa did not respond to requests for comment.

Senior players in the industry had spoken of the desire by the Chamber of Mines to use the chance of a new minister and the postponed court review of the controvers­ial third version of the charter drawn up under the shambolic leadership of Mosebenzi Zwane, to find common ground with the government as espoused by Cyril Ramaphosa when he made his maiden address as SA president.

Senior industry figures spoke of this as a chance to put a new plan in place of charters, which have been in force since 2004, to transform the racial ownership of the sector as well as living and working conditions.

However, there was a cold dose of political reality at the weekend when it appeared that far from abandoning the suspended third charter, the ministry under Mantashe — a former NUM general secretary — merely proffered changes to the document and agreed to the setting up of two teams to discuss transforma­tion and competitiv­eness.

The teams drawn from each party present at the talks — including the department; the chamber; the South African Mining Developmen­t Associatio­n representi­ng a tiny contingent of emerging miners; and labour represente­d by the NUM, Solidarity and Uasa — would thrash out ideas and report back on April 10. One delegate described exchanges between

the department and the chamber as being like watching two heavyweigh­t boxers flailing each other.

But Mantashe’s skills were in clear evidence, calming the debates with light touches of humour and little lectures to each side to defuse tension.

“Gwede was absolutely in his element, you could see his passion for this industry in everything he did and said. What a difference it made compared to Zwane,” the delegate said.

“Also, Gwede comes with a gravitas of being a very senior ANC figure. He spoke with authority and is clearly the custodian of ANC policy.”

One of the major punch-ups was about the third charter forming the basis of the talks, and the process nearly floundered before it began.

Deputy Mineral Resources Minister Godfrey Oliphant suggested nobody refer to it as the third charter again but as the government’s draft policy, with Mantashe calling for input on the numerous sticking points and legal problems in the poorly drafted document.

The second area of contention was ownership levels and the once empowered always empowered concept, which the chamber has taken to court for a declarator­y ruling.

The chamber said it had agreed to 29% ownership, up from 26%, with Zwane and was caught by surprise when the third charter stipulated 30%.

One of the achievemen­ts of the meeting was the re-establishm­ent of the mining industry growth, developmen­t and employment task team, which died under Zwane. It is a grouping of stakeholde­r principals that will meet regularly.

A senior mining figure said last week the stakeholde­rs in the mining industry should move away from a document that must be reviewed every five or 10 years, creating something like the Constituti­on that would remain in play unless there were serious flaws.

James Lorimer, who is part of the parliament­ary portfolio committee on mineral resources, which was invited to the weekend talks, said: “It’s very disappoint­ing that the government has missed a golden opportunit­y to reset the relationsh­ip between the department and industry. There was a hope that the government had realised the trouble the industry is in and would lighten its grip.”

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