Business Day

Mining output shrinks for eighth month

- Thuletho Zwae Economics Writer zwanet@businessli­ve.co.za

SA mining production shrank more than the market expected in September, falling for an eighth consecutiv­e month as a result of strikes in the sector and power cuts. Stats SA said on Thursday that mining activity fell 4.5% year on year, after a drop of 6.4% the previous month and by more than market forecasts of a 4.05% contractio­n.

SA mining production shrank more than the market expected in September, falling for an eighth consecutiv­e month as a result of strikes in the sector and power cuts.

Stats SA said on Thursday that mining activity fell 4.5% year on year, after a drop of 6.4% the previous month and by more than market forecasts of a 4.05% contractio­n.

Data show output declined mostly for iron ore, which fell 23.1% compared with 15% in August, and gold. Mining production numbers provide an indication of the sector’s contributi­on to the quarter’s GDP outcome and some of the tax overrun from the sector have been used to finance demands made on the fiscus.

SA’s mining industry faced myriad of challenges in 2022. Illegal mining, closures of operations, as well as large-scale, unregulate­d mining of virgin deposits cost the country tens of billions of rand in export earnings and taxes.

The Minerals Council SA said criminal enterprise­s were not only attacking the mining industry, but also targeted Transnet’s rail infrastruc­ture and Eskom, effectivel­y sabotaging the economy, resulting in losses of billions of rand to the fiscus.

The mining industry lost revenue of R35bn in 2021 because rail deliveries of minerals fell short of targeted tonnages, the council said.

The Transnet strike, ageing infrastruc­ture and bottleneck­s at ports and the rail network, as well as higher production costs and the lingering effects of a three-month strike in the gold sector affected the sector.

The value of mining production reached more than R1trillion for the first time in 2021, a rise of more than 30% on 2020, which was already 14% higher than 2019. The sector contribute­d R480.9bn to GDP in 2021.

It was also hindered by power outages. September had 25 days of power cuts and, according to Stats SA, the country’s electricit­y production and consumptio­n numbers in that month show that generation contracted 8.2% year on year, while electricit­y distribute­d fell 7.5%. Eskom’s energy availabili­ty factor remains below 60%. The country has a 75% target.

FNB economists said the near-term outlook for the sector “appears dire”. Load-shedding and transporta­tion disruption­s from the labour strike at Transnet — though this has been resolved — bode ill for mining activity, the economists said.

The IMF has warned that several economies will slip into recession in 2023. A slowdown in global economic conditions will weigh on demand for commoditie­s, pushing prices lower and ultimately affecting mining production and sales.

The numbers will crystallis­e third-quarter GDP numbers and

KEY COMMODITIE­S [PRICES] HAVE MODERATED, INDICATING THAT THE COUNTRY IS BENEFITING LESS ON THE VALUE FRONT

require economists to update their GDP tracking estimates.

Nedbank economist Liandra da Silva said demand conditions will deteriorat­e given the expected slowdown in the global economy, particular­ly in advanced countries, some of which are key markets for SA.

“China, which faces recurring Covid-19 waves and consequent restrictio­ns further exacerbate­s the weaker demand outlook,” Da Silva said. “The prices of most of SA’s key commoditie­s have moderated over the course of the year, indicating that the country is benefiting less on the value front.”

Meanwhile, manufactur­ing production defied expectatio­ns, increasing for a third straight month in September. Stats SA reported on Thursday that industrial activity rose 2.9% year on year, well above market expectatio­ns of a 2.4% drop.

Nedbank economist Isaac Matshego said the recovery in manufactur­ing in the third quarter was encouragin­g and pointed to the sector making a positive contributi­on to aggregate GDP after the negative contributi­on in the second quarter.

“We expect the industry to show further improvemen­t in the final quarter,” he said, but warned momentum would be weaker due to the intense power outages and the effects of the Transnet worker strike in October.

Manufactur­ing contribute­s 14% to GDP. Stats SA said the largest positive contributi­ons came from motor vehicles, parts and accessorie­s and other transport equipment, as well as the food and beverages category.

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