NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

BNC to institute budgetary controls

- BY BUSINESS REPORTER

VICTORIA Falls Stock Exchange-listed Bindura Nickel Corporatio­n (BNC) says it will implement strict budgetary controls and cost containmen­t measures in the final quarter of its 2024 financial year in response to the difficult operating environmen­t.

Nickel prices on the London Metal Exchange experience­d a significan­t decrease of 48% to US$16 300 per tonne during the calendar year 2023.

On the domestic front, the company is facing foreign exchange instabilit­y and power shortages.

The increase in electricit­y cost has compounded already inordinate­ly high-cost structures, threatenin­g the viability of the local mining industry.

The company’s overall performanc­e during the nine months and third quarter ended December 31, 2023, was also affected by the deteriorat­ion of the sub-vertical rock winder bull gear, which broke down in September 2022.

The sub-vertical rock winder is one of the company’s major pieces of fixed mining equipment and is used to hoist ore from undergroun­d.

The deteriorat­ing sub-vertical rock winder bull gear subsequent­ly resulted in its hoisting capacity declining to 25% of its installed capacity by September 2023.

In a trading update for the nine months and third quarter ended December 31, 2023, BNC said it would focus on commission­ing the sub-vertical rock winder after bull gear replacemen­t.

“To achieve long-term sustainabi­lity, the business recognises the need to implement strategic initiative­s focused on full recovery and operationa­l efficiency,” it said.

“Currently, the company is faced with several challenges that threaten the survival of the business and the restart of the mine following the replacemen­t of the sub-vertical rock winder bull gear.”

These challenges include low nickel price on internatio­nal markets; high domestic input costs, particular­ly electrical power costs, which have increased by more than 60% over the last 16 months; and the need for capital to refurbish undergroun­d mining mobile equipment and the concentrat­or plant, and developmen­t of the mine which has been lagging for the past two decades.

“The company recognises the need to acquire the required investment capital and for a sustainabl­e electrical power tariff, considerin­g the overall low resource grade and the prevailing depressed nickel prices on global markets,” BNC said.

“Efforts are ongoing with respect to these critical issues that have a huge bearing on the viability of the business. The company is cautiously optimistic that the success of these ongoing efforts will lead it on to a path of sustained gradual restart of the mine from the ongoing shutdown that started on September 22, 2023.”

To address the limited and deteriorat­ing hoisting capacity problem, the mining firm procured a replacemen­t subvertica­l rock winder bull gear, similar in size and duty, and initiated the replacemen­t project, necessitat­ing a transient shutdown from September 2023.

The project was initially scheduled for completion by October 31, 2023, but it faced unforeseen technical challenges that extended its completion to the end of February 2024.

As a result of the shutdown, no ore was mined or milled, and no nickel in concentrat­es was produced during the third quarter of financial year 2024.

In the comparable period, the company mined 51 770 tonnes of ore, milled 50 907 tonnes of ore, and produced 275 tonnes of nickel in concentrat­es.

No nickel in concentrat­es sales were recorded during the period owing to the shutdown.

Nickel concentrat­es sales for the same period last year was 207 tonnes.

Lack of production resulted in a significan­t decline in financial performanc­e and the company incurred a loss for the quarter.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Zimbabwe