The Zimbabwe Independent

Mining in Zim: Time to use it or lose it

- JP CASEY

BETWEEN colonial interventi­on and a weak regulatory framework, mining in Zimbabwe has struggled to live up to its potential. With the government cracking down on undevelope­d licences, and aiming to force companies to “use it or lose it”, we consider the history of mining in Zimbabwe, and who the winners and losers of the new policy could be.

Mining could prove to be big business in Zimbabwe, with mineral exports responsibl­e for 60% of the country’s export earnings as of October 2018, and the mining sector contributi­ng around 16% of national GDP. e government has also outlined ambitious plans to quadruple the sector’s total value to US$12 billion by 2023 as it looks to take advantage of abundant natural resources such as the country’s Great Dyke, the second-largest platinum deposit in the world with around 2,8 billion tonnes of ore belonging to the platinum group metals.

However, this potential has been hamstrung by an inefficien­t sector, which has failed to meet its 2019 gold production target of 40t, and reached a value estimated to be around just US$3 billion. A key contributi­ng factor is the country’s lax licensing laws, which permit foreign companies to own 100% of a mine licence for any commodity, save platinum and diamonds, in perpetuity. is has led to several firms holding cheaply-acquired licences for years, with no pressure to develop them into producing mines, cutting into Zimbabwe’s potential production and depriving smaller and local companies from the opportunit­y to develop projects.

In November, Mining minister Winston Chitando announced that the government will force companies to develop these assets as part of a “use it or lose it” policy, its latest attempt to remove inefficien­cies from and stimulate growth in the mining sector.

e policy builds on similar initiative­s deployed in the gold mining sector, and is a combinatio­n of pro-Zimbabwean policies implemente­d in the years following independen­ce, and pro-business policies that have underpinne­d the country’s economy for a century. e question remains, however, who stands to gain the most from this hybrid legal apparatus?

Foreign involvemen­t

Despite its mineral wealth, Zimbabwe has historical­ly struggled to turn these resources into profitable enterprise­s, in no small part due to the country’s occupation by the UK in the mid20th century. roughout the post-war period, including its lengthy divorce from the British between the unilateral declaratio­n of independen­ce in 1965 and the election of Robert Mugabe as prime minister in 1980, the influence of overseas, and particular­ly British, companies in its mineral sector hamstrung the mining industry.

In e mining Industry in Zimbabwe: Labour, Capital and the State, published in Africa Developmen­t by John Bradbury and Eric Worby, the writers note that by 1980, up to 95% of the country’s mineral output was produced and controlled by foreign companies, a model that led to a dramatic concentrat­ion of the mining workforce in a few projects.

By 1980, the 14 largest mines in the country, all of which were owned by foreign firms, employed 61% of the country’s mining workforce, leaving much of the country’s mineral wealth undevelope­d despite these miners possessing licenses for a number of projects.

is impact has been magnified by the struggles of Zimbabwe’s domestic miners to compete with these foreign investors. Warren Beech, head of mining and infrastruc­ture at law firm Eversheds Sutherland, noted that “without significan­t investment from foreign-owned mining companies, it is unlikely that Zimbabwe will be able to unlock its vast mineral wealth, which is vital not only to the developmen­t of Zimbabwe’s economy, but also transforma­tion, growth and developmen­t, in general”.

Yet despite these investment­s in mining, there has not been a parallel growth in the Zimbabwean economy, with Bradbury and Worby noting that the goal of much of the investment in mining has been “the process of capital accumulati­on and the inter-regional transfer of value out of Zimbabwe mostly into South Africa, the UK and the USA”.

Despite what they call a “gratifying increase in the value of production” for a select few firms, the total value of the country’s mineral production fell from ZW$414,8 million in 1980 to

 ??  ?? e Zimbabwe government is cracking down on undevelope­d licences and is aiming to force companies to “use it or lose it”.
e Zimbabwe government is cracking down on undevelope­d licences and is aiming to force companies to “use it or lose it”.

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