Business Day

Seriti opens 25-year undergroun­d extension at Mpumalanga colliery

- Denene Erasmus erasmusd@businessli­ve.co.za

In aweek when political leaders weighed the consequenc­es of extending the life of some of SA’s coal power stations, one of Eskom’s largest coal suppliers showed confidence in the commodity ’ s future by giving one of its mines an extra 25 years.

Coal miner Seriti on Friday hosted a “first sump” ceremony as it broke ground for a project to switch from opencast to undergroun­d mining at its Klipspruit colliery near Ogies.

Seriti CEO Mike Teke said this will help maintain present production and export levels from the colliery in Mpumalanga in the future.

The mine has an average run of mine production of 8.5million tonnes a year and planned production from the undergroun­d operations amount to about 4.5-million tonnes a year. This is what is needed to meet the mine’s overall tonnage requiremen­ts.

The new undergroun­d section is expected to reach full production by the third quarter of this year, or the first quarter of 2024 at the latest.

The total resource is estimated to be about 600-million tonnes with about 30% of the resource in inferred status.

The decision to start mining undergroun­d was taken after it had become uneconomic­al to continue opencast mining at the site. By switching from opencast to undergroun­d mining the life of mine for the Klipspruit colliery will be extended up to 25 years.

Teke said while “multinatio­nal mining companies in SA were under pressure to exit coal” Seriti believes coal mining still has a long future in SA. The company will continue to invest in the developmen­t of its coal assets.

“We are not against renewable energy, but we believe coalfired power stations will continue to operate alongside renewables to provide baseload,” said Teke.

In 2022 Seriti concluded an R892m deal to acquire a majority stake in Windlab Africa’s portfolio of 4GW wind and solar power assets through its subsidiary Seriti Green.

Klipspruit GM Dirk Miller said that the mine is set to last until about 2036, but because the company is already mining so deep it has become extremely expensive to operate.

“The mine needs to operate as a going concern even at a relaxed coal price. We needed to set it up so that in depressed pricing times we can still make money from the mine. That is why we decided to go undergroun­d — because in this case undergroun­d [ mining] is substantia­lly cheaper than opencast mining because of the depth of the mine,” Miller said.

The miner produces two products. One is a high quality, low ash coal exclusivel­y for the export market. The other is middlings coal, some of which Seriti hopes to sell to Eskom pending the outcome of talks.

Miller said that from opencast mining Seriti could achieve a yield ratio of 28%-32% highqualit­y coal, but in the undergroun­d section it expects the share of high-quality coal to rise to about 42% of the total yield.

The project is fully selffunded through capital spend of about R1.4bn, he said.

Mineral resources & energy minister Gwede Mantashe, who attended the “first sump” ceremony for the mine, said this showed the market expects demand for coal to continue for many years.

“Coal will be here for a long time and it will perhaps [be part of the future] permanentl­y if we invest in [clean coal] technologi­es,” said Mantashe.

“When you are opening a deep mine that will last for at least 25 years, what you are saying is there will be [a market for coal] in 25 years. The reality is coal is needed [now and in the future].”

COAL-FIRED STATIONS WILL CONTINUE TO OPERATE ALONGSIDE RENEWABLES TO PROVIDE BASELOAD

 ?? Denene Erasmus ?? Breaking ground: The 'first sump' at the new undergroun­d section of Seriti’s Klipspruit colliery near Ogies in Mpumalanga on Friday. /
Denene Erasmus Breaking ground: The 'first sump' at the new undergroun­d section of Seriti’s Klipspruit colliery near Ogies in Mpumalanga on Friday. /

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