Mmegi

Debswana’s

- MBONGENI MGUNI Staff Writer

Debswana’s recent move to establish its own mining services firm carries echoes of a decision four years ago by one of its shareholde­rs, De Beers, to enter the synthetic diamonds industry, analysts say.

By investing millions of US dollars into producing its own synthetics, De Beers’ powerplay allowed it to bring its considerab­le financial and technical muscle into an industry that was increasing­ly imperillin­g its core business.

For Debswana, the launch of Naledi Mining Services is equally a powerplay built on financial and technical expertise, but one that allows the country’s biggest minerals producer to better dictate terms in a future where the costs of digging up the precious stones will only get more expensive.

Officially incorporat­ed on August 4, Naledi is set to charge into the competitiv­e mining contractor industry, where major players, mainly from South Africa and beyond, have enjoyed free rein over the decades dating back to the country’s mining boom.

Mining contractor­s are independen­t entities engaged by the owners of mines to undertake their mining operations, handling everything from the labour, equipment, mining method and others.

The contractor­s help restrain operating costs for the owners through their economies of scale and the fact that a fixed rate is negotiable, while technical and financial risks to the owners are minimised.

New mines that do not have the capital for earthmovin­g equipment or the skills for mining, prefer to engage mining contractor­s while building up their own capacity.

The contracts are money spinners. In 2019, Khoemacau engaged an Australian firm, Barminco for its mining services in a deal worth $554 million (P7.2 billion at current rates) over five years. At Debswana, the Cut 9 project to expand Jwaneng Mine was awarded to Majwe Mining for P15.7 billion, before the diamond giant terminated the deal early last year.

Majwe would have conducted waste mining involving billions of tonnes of rock and sand, allowing Debswana to then tap into the ore. In shifting its weight into contract mining, Debswana is taking a leaf out of De Beers’ book and going in big. In 2018 when De Beers moved into synthetics, it budgeted $94 million for a Portland, Oregon (USA) laboratory that would produce 500,000 carats annually or about one in every eight synthetic diamonds in the world.

Naledi is similarly not getting into the industry from the bottom rung.

“The company will employ more than 750 workers and have an annual turnover of P300 million,” Debswana’s head of technical services Bakani Motlhabani told a recent business briefing.

“Initially, it will provide labour services for Cut 9 including operationa­l skills such as machines, trucks, supervisio­n, earthmovin­g equipment, repairs and maintenanc­e.”

While Debswana’s move into contract mining echoes De Beers’ own powerplay from a few years ago, officials at the local company say the developmen­t is innocuous. The move, rather, was motivated by the push for lower costs and the lack of local capacity, when the original contract with Majwe was terminated in favour of a hybrid arrangemen­t where Debswana would partner with a citizen contractor.

“You will have heard about our bold and big decision to move away from full contract mining at Jwaneng in order to find a lower cost model of operating,” Motlhabani said.

“Since then, we have been looking to say ‘what’s the sustainabl­e way to implement the preferred hybrid model where some of the services are managed by us and others are outsourced?’

“We went to market and settled on having outsourced labour services for Cut 9, but we were not successful in getting a suitable partner for this and after thinking long and hard and innovating, we landed on a subsidiary of Debswana as a way of getting the benefits of the large Cut 9.”

According to Motlhabani, by engaging Naledi for Cut 9, Debswana will benefit from efficienci­es around lower costs.

“If we had not come up with this initiative, with the current high inflation we would be worse off.” Naledi’s rivals in the industry would have been happy had Motlhabani’s remarks ended there.

 ?? ?? Going deeper: Naledi Mining Services will handle the massive Cut 9 contract
Going deeper: Naledi Mining Services will handle the massive Cut 9 contract

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