Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Botswana miners seek Zim partnershi­ps

- Oliver Kazunga Senior Business Reporter

THE Botswana Chamber of Mines (BMC) is seeking strategic partnershi­ps with Zimbabwean companies to exploit growing opportunit­ies in the mining industry.

Speaking during a breakfast meeting organised by the Engineerin­g, Iron and Steel Associatio­n of Zimbabwe (EISAZ) in Bulawayo yesterday, BMC projects manager Mr Joe Ramotshabi said strategic partnershi­ps between companies from the two countries should result in winwin situations.

“What we are looking for as BCM and the mining sector are strategic partners. We work with suppliers currently, but we are looking for strategic partners to work with and not suppliers,” he said.

“Strategic partners that we are looking for are companies that can set up operations in Botswana and get the involvemen­t of mining companies there in terms of guiding them and the specific features, qualities and specificat­ions and other things like that.”

Mr Ramotshabi said ideal partnershi­ps should foster openness and informatio­n sharing.

“If you know you have a cash flow problem, maybe you are going to have a cash flow problem in the next two or three months, you actually tell the mine that I have a cash flow problem. Either they advance you or help you to find financing such that the problem is sorted,” he said.

Mr Ramotshabi said the Botswana mining sector’s contributi­on to the Gross Domestic Product was envisaged to grow by seven percent to 55 percent in the next few years. He noted that while Zimbabwe has technical expertise in various discipline­s, Botswana has the financial muscle, which presents opportunit­ies for strategic collaborat­ions.

“Zimbabwe has very strong technical and skilled people. In Botswana we don’t have those yet but an average person has funds to invest. Our understand­ing about Zimbabwe, the perception, is that the dollar is not there and therefore we are saying we have got the purse and thus there is an opportunit­y to team up. There are also Botswana enterprise­s that are keen to invest in Zimbabwe,” said Mr Ramotshabi.

In a speech read on his behalf by his deputy, Mr Beki Mangena, EISAZ president Mr Austin Tigere assured BMC that Zimbabwean engineerin­g firms have enough capacity to supply the Botswana mining industry with engineerin­g spares and equipment.

“The abundance of iron ore and related raw materials locally, combined with highly skilled manpower, will go a long way in ensuring that the engineerin­g needs of the local and regional markets are met.

“EISAZ has demonstrat­ed ability in producing new, innovative products that can be exported anywhere in the world,” he said.

Speaking at the same occasion, EISAZ western region chairperso­n, Mr Ticharwa Garabga, said the engineerin­g, iron and steel industry was a key cog in the manufactur­ing industry as the robust architectu­re of the modern industrial world is made of steel.

“The quality and quantity of the iron and steel industry of a country greatly influences the nature, type and pace of industrial developmen­t, as well as the way of life in a modern economy.

“In Zimbabwe, the constructi­on industry consumes 70 percent output from the engineerin­g industry, with the manufactur­ing industry taking up 20 percent, mining six percent and agricultur­e consuming four percent,” he said.

In a national study report produced by the Zimbabwe Economic Policy Analysis and Research Unit in 2014, the country’s engineerin­g, iron and steel sector has the potential to generate $14 billion in revenue to the economy. — @okazunga

 ??  ?? Reserve Bank deputy governor Dr Kupukile Mlambo addresses delegates at a breakfast meeting with the Botswana Chamber of Mines at a Bulawayo hotel yesterday. — Picture by Eliah Saushoma
Reserve Bank deputy governor Dr Kupukile Mlambo addresses delegates at a breakfast meeting with the Botswana Chamber of Mines at a Bulawayo hotel yesterday. — Picture by Eliah Saushoma

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