Cape Times

Surging Pan African forced to secure mine from illegals at a cost of $3.4m

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

PAN African Resources, while reporting that its interim revenue surged to $132.8 million (R1.98 billion) on the strong gold price, said yesterday that it had beefed-up security at its Barberton mine in Mpumalanga or risked being “overrun” by illegal miners.

Pan African chief executive Cobus Loots told analysts during a financial results presentati­on for the six months to December 2019 that the group’s priority had been to safeguard its assets.

“We are exposed to a lot of illegal miners. We are seeing an influx of illegal miners from countries like Mozambique. If we had not improved security, we would have been overrun today. We have made the business sustainabl­e from a security point of view,” said Loots.

Pan African, the junior JSE-listed gold producer, said security costs represente­d 3.9 percent of production costs and had increased by 3 percent to $3.4m in 2019 from $3.3m in 2018.

The group said security had jumped 6.6 percent in rand terms due to an increased focus on addressing illegal mining activities and once-off costs incurred during instances of community unrest.

The group said production from the Barberton Mines complex had fallen 6.3 percent to 47 356 ounces, from 50 556 ounces in 2018, as production from undergroun­d and surface mining decreased by 4.7 percent to 36 737 ounces, from 38 550 ounces, due to community unrest experience­d during July 2019.

To add insult to injury, the challengin­g geological conditions at Barberton Fairview operation had also impacted production.

Despite problems at Barberton, group production increased by 14.7 percent to 92 941 ounces from 81 014 ounces in 2018.

Last month the industry called for government interventi­on in the sector, following the spate of brazen killings by heavily armed gangs at different mines.

“South Africa’s operating environmen­t remains challengin­g, with key issues being electricit­y availabili­ty, illegal mining, community protests and disruption­s, escalating costs and regulatory uncertaint­y.

“These challenges are successful­ly mitigated by employing pre-emptive risk management initiative­s and by Pan African Resources’ pro-active management approach,” said Loots.

In terms of earnings, group profit after taxation increased by 125.8 percent to $21.9m from $9.7m due to the improved production performanc­e at Evander Mines and the prevailing robust dollar and rand gold price.

The group adjusted earnings before interest, taxation, depreciati­on and amortisati­on (Ebitda), impairment reversals and fair value adjustment­s on derivative financial assets and liabilitie­s (adjusted Ebitda) increased considerab­ly by 83.4 percent to $44.2m from $24.1m in 2018.

Earnings a share increased by 128 percent to $1.14 per share from 50c per share with an increase of 126 percent in headline earnings a share to $1.13 a share.

Pan African Resources shares closed 1.25 percent higher at R2.43 on the JSE yesterday.

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