Business Day

New Covid-19 series by top CEOs, experts

• The futures of both parties are intimately entwined, and getting through the Covid-19 pandemic crisis requires humanity and accountabi­lity

- Mark Cutifani Cutifani is Anglo American CEO ● Editorial: Page 6

In today’s edition we launch a daily series of articles by business leaders looking to the future in the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic. In Business Beyond Covid, the CEOs of some of SA’s biggest corporatio­ns, and other sector experts, consider the impact the novel coronaviru­s and resulting lockdown have had on their industries, predict what can bounce back and what has changed irrevocabl­y, and plot a course for the economic recovery. First out of the gate is Anglo American CEO Mark Cutifani with an essay on how the pandemic has brought home the importance of mines, employees and communitie­s pulling together for the greater good.

Three months into the global spread of the Covid-19 pandemic, few can question its devastatin­g health, social and economic effects on so many people in so many countries. The word “unpreceden­ted” is being well aired, but rightly so.

There are no rules for how to respond to such a threat — whether you are a government, a multilater­al organisati­on or a company — and we must draw on our innate sense of humanity for doing the right thing.

It is too easy to throw stones, and so we must focus our energy and resources on the role we can play as individual­s, and in my case, as the leader in Anglo American and as a mining industry leader.

An effective response to Covid-19 must consider people’s lives in the first instance, and livelihood­s, which is about protecting lives in the medium to longer term. From South America to Southern Africa, we know our mines and our host communitie­s are deeply connected, that they operate together as an ecosystem, and that both must be healthy to prosper.

The choices we make during this crisis will shape the future of mining in SA, and the future of our social compact; that is, to be partners in the future. In so many, often rural, communitie­s, mining provides many essential services — water, health facilities, education, power, infrastruc­ture and accommodat­ion — and drives micro-economies and employment up and down the value and supply chains.

It is our duty to sustain that critical contributi­on and to act responsibl­y towards the many who depend on us more than ever in these difficult times. As we work to respond to the most immediate needs, we must also recognise that the effectiven­ess of our response now will also shape the all-important

THE CHOICES WE MAKE DURING THIS CRISIS WILL SHAPE THE FUTURE OF MINING IN SA, AND THE FUTURE OF OUR SOCIAL COMPACT

economic recovery phase.

The more effective our response to the pandemic, the more rapid the recovery. In mining’s case, the more we manage to protect and support our employees and communitie­s, the healthier and more prosperous they will be, and the greater mining’s ability will be to drive sustained economic recovery in our countries of operation.

At Anglo American we have built our response to our employees and the communitie­s around our operations. Our WeCare programme is designed to support the four pillars of physical health, mental health, living with dignity and a holistic socio-economic community package. The programme builds on the many services we normally provide and covers health education and behavioura­l change initiative­s, community support to combat gender-based violence, health screening and testing, support for small and medium enterprise­s and entreprene­urs, and the provision of food parcels to those in most desperate need.

Now more than ever mining companies must extend themselves beyond the mine gate. We must be cognisant of how decisions affect local businesses. Keeping community businesses that offer goods and services operating safely and effectivel­y is key to ensuring the long-term sustainabi­lity of those communitie­s. We are part of the fabric of our local communitie­s, and they will remember us for what we did when it was needed, and when it mattered most.

Our communitie­s understand that many services depend upon their neighbouri­ng mine, and in turn they understand that mine activities depend upon their community. Our communitie­s must feel that we are partners with them through this crisis. Our ability to support the community fits with our ability to continue running our business. We cannot have one without the other.

By the same token, we cannot take risks with people’s lives. Measured lockdowns, the identifica­tion and tracking of infection sources and effective isolation measures are the real tools of our ability to run our mines and support functionin­g communitie­s. However, consistent with that view, we will take the hard decisions to temporaril­y shut operations if we feel we cannot keep our colleagues safe and healthy. Our response is underpinne­d by the objective of not doing anything that will hinder our ability to recover. Our response as a company has not only been guided by our purpose, but the challenges we all face have affirmed the relevance of our purpose as a company — to “reimagine mining to improve people’s lives”.

From how we change the future of mining — using technology to use less energy, water and create less waste to extract the precious metals and minerals we all need for modern life — to building on the many ways our business and products improve lives for billions of people, locally and globally, mining is evolving.

We should all embrace that change for the better: a safer future, a carbon-neutral future, a prosperous future. A future in which we are working with partners across the government, non-government­al organisati­ons and the private sector to create self-sustaining, thriving communitie­s built on diverse economic activity.

Our FutureSmar­t Mining™ programme, and within it our Sustainabl­e Mining Plan, already has us on a clear pathway to this future.

The opportunit­y I can see in this current crisis is that together we can accelerate, and thereby establish a far more resilient mining industry and a stronger, mutually reinforcin­g partnershi­p between the mine and the community. The responsibi­lity to achieve that goal sits on the shoulders of companies across the entire value and supply chain, so that our ecosystem is better able to withstand future shocks and prosper through thick and thin.

Having spent my entire working life in this incredible industry of mining, and as a mining engineer of course, I am passionate about what we do. And maybe I am also a little biased. But what I have learnt is the value of what our industry can bring to society if we pull together with others and act as an all-important catalyst for positive change. This is an opportunit­y to stand up and show how we are making a real and lasting positive difference.

 ??  ?? Mark Cutifani
Mark Cutifani
 ?? /Reuters ?? People first: CEO Mark Cutifani says Anglo American has built its response to its employees and the communitie­s around its operations.
/Reuters People first: CEO Mark Cutifani says Anglo American has built its response to its employees and the communitie­s around its operations.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa