Business Day

ArcelorMit­tal plans to rejuvenate Thabazimbi

- Allan Seccombe Resources Writer seccombea@bdfm.co.za

Having secured full ownership of the asset for a paltry sum, ArcelorMit­tal SA will decide in a few years whether it can restart operations at the Thabazimbi mine that Kumba Iron Ore stopped two years ago.

The mine in Limpopo was jointly owned by the companies and was one of the sources of iron ore for ArcelorMit­tal, which blended it with ore from Kumba’s flagship Sishen mine in the Northern Cape. After the failure of the pit wall in 2015, Kumba, an Anglo American subsidiary and Africa’s largest iron ore miner, took the decision to shut the marginal operation, triggering talks with SA’s leading steelmaker to buy the mine.

Iron ore is a major ingredient of the steel-making process.

PROLONG

“What we would like to achieve is to prolong the life of the mine. The town of Thabazimbi is dependent on that, but there has to be commercial [value] for ourselves,” ArcelorMit­tal SA CEO Kobus Verster said in an interview on Friday.

“It’s very early days.” In February 2017, the parties said ArcelorMit­tal, which was responsibl­e for 96% of the cost of rehabilita­ting Thabazimbi, would buy the mine’s assets and liabilitie­s for R1 and the steelmaker would assume responsibi­lity for the 63 people working on rehabilita­tion at the site.

Concurrent­ly with the rehabilita­tion work, which was fully funded by money in secure trust, ArcelorMit­tal would extract 1.3-million tons of iron ore from stockpiled material through a small, relatively cheap modular plant rather than restarting the large idled processing plant, he said.

While those two work streams were under way, ArcelorMit­tal was assessing what opportunit­ies existed to restart mining, utilising part of the existing pit and moving into fresh sources of ore, he told Business Day.

Having full ownership of Thabazimbi would make the rehabilita­tion work easier. “That material on surface is not our main objective. Our focus is on the rehabilita­tion,” Verster said.

“We will start doing sampling and see what opportunit­ies there are in the longer term to restart the mine.

“We have to consider what new technologi­es we could use, what the life of the mine would be, and how the ore could best be utilised,” he said.

Thabazimbi was a source of about 2-million tons of ore a year that was supplied solely to ArcelorMit­tal for at least five years before the closure decision was taken.

The mine employed 1,150 people at the time.

There was a strategic rationale for ArcelorMit­tal to have its own iron ore mine, Verster said, as it would add to the risk mitigation of sourcing iron ore from third parties.

ArcelorMit­tal buys ore from Kumba’s Sishen under a favourable pricing agreement as well as a number of junior miners in the Northern Cape.

“Where we can expand on that diversific­ation it would be beneficial from a pricing perspectiv­e and give us more flexibilit­y on the mix of material we use,” he said.

The Thabazimbi ore was historical­ly blended with that from Sishen to dilute the impurities in the Northern Cape ore.

As Thabazimbi aged it became progressiv­ely more expensive to operate and was regularly unprofitab­le on an annual basis by the time the decision was made in July 2015 to close it, with Kumba saying it was a “high-cost mine with difficult mining” and which had “reached the end of its economic life”.

Kumba had investigat­ed an extension to the Thabazimbi mine , a project it dubbed Project Phoenix and which in 2006 it estimated would need $290m to cover costs.

It would deliver up to 3.4million tons a year and add 20 years of life beyond the 2016 closure the company had envisioned. However, Kumba opted not to invest in the project, which sparked a legal row with ArcelorMit­tal.

 ?? /File picture ?? Digging it up: ArcelorMit­tal says it would like to extend the life of the Thabazimbi mine in Limpopo.
/File picture Digging it up: ArcelorMit­tal says it would like to extend the life of the Thabazimbi mine in Limpopo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa