Business Day

Africa must add value to raw material — ANC

- Kgothatso Madisa

The ANC wants African countries to enter an agreement that all mined minerals are processed locally. The party says the exporting of raw minerals robs the entire African continent of its true economic and employment potential.

As part of its plan to get South Africans into jobs, the priority of its 2024 election manifesto, the ANC says it wants only finished products to be exported.

The governing party wants to create a corridor that will see major mining countries such as the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), Zimbabwe and SA agree to beneficiat­e minerals within the local economies.

“Our overall attitude towards beneficiat­ion, first, is panAfrican in its outlook, and this is the point that I think must not be lost,” said Zuko Godlimpi, ANC national executive committee member and deputy chair of its economic transforma­tion subcommitt­ee. “The export of African minerals robs the continent of its industrial potential and its job-creating potential.”

The proposed plan would not be haphazard, and would not disrupt the economy, he said.

“We are going to delay — in a systematic way, without disrupting the supply chain and value chains overall — the arrival of South African minerals into global markets by improving local value addition, beneficiat­ion and even manufactur­ing of final goods.

“But some of the market products that we intend competing are produced using minerals that are not just concentrat­ed in SA only; some of them are in the Southern African Developmen­t Community (Sadc) region.”

The DRC, which is the world’s third-largest copper producer and the top producer of cobalt, a key component in electric car batteries, is already having discussion­s about exporting only finished products instead of raw material.

President Felix Tshisekedi, who began his second term in January, has said his administra­tion would ensure the country’s natural resources and minerals work for and benefit Congolese people.

Godlimpi said discussion­s were taking place with Sadc countries to create what he called a beneficiat­ion corridor in the region.

“One of the discussion­s is we are going to have to anchor our industrial and beneficiat­ion strategy in a co-operative framework that can be bought into by other African countries. As you are aware, the DRC is discussing beneficiat­ion and countries like Zimbabwe are discussing beneficiat­ion and industrial­isation,” he said.

“We want to build a beneficiat­ion corridor across Sadc so that the beneficiat­ion value chain must start off in the DRC, come down to Zimbabwe and SA might actually be the station where the final good is produced. So it’s a comprehens­ive approach that we are thinking about.”

There was a disjunctur­e in policy alignment because the SA government issued mining licences but little was done to put conditions in place that would see locals benefiting more from the mined products, he said.

“Take a simple example, the state has a monopoly over SA minerals because it issues licences, but the conditiona­lities that go into issuing licences are not related to an industrial strategy. So that’s one of the things that we’re getting into.

“We want to have a conversati­on that says when you’re issuing a mining licence, you’ve got to attach to it licensing conditions that feed into this industrial and beneficiat­ion strategy.”

If the country could get this part right, the government would be able to create more jobs, said Godlimpi. “From a jobs output point of view, once we get it right, once there is an increasing number of factories that are built in SA, on the basis of beneficiat­ion and manufactur­ing, we will hit jobs that are beyond the 2.5-million that we wrote in the manifesto, just in the mining and manufactur­ing sector.

“We’ll hit above 2.5-million over a period of seven to 10 years, because we’re not talking about just one cycle.

“The five-year cycle is to set in motion the policy mechanism and start with some of them, but in a seven- and 10-year, medium-term period, we’re convinced that we will get it right.”

 ?? /123RF ?? Licence conditions:
Mining licences must be issued subject to industrial and beneficiat­ion conditions, says Zuko Godlimpi, ANC economic transforma­tion subcommitt­ee deputy chair.
/123RF Licence conditions: Mining licences must be issued subject to industrial and beneficiat­ion conditions, says Zuko Godlimpi, ANC economic transforma­tion subcommitt­ee deputy chair.

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