Daily Dispatch

HUGE PLATINUM MINE TO SLASH 13,000 JOBS OVER NEXT TWO YEARS

Major restructur­ing costing R2.7bn will also see closures of mines

- ALLAN SECCOMBE

Impala Platinum’s Rustenburg mine faces an end to uneconomic­al shafts, with future mining activity focused on profitable, lower-cost, longer-life assets.

Impala Platinum, the world’s second-largest platinum miner, is cutting its future production to 520,000oz of platinum and slashing the number of its mines to six from 11, with 13,000 jobs to go within two years.

Implats is the latest mining company to announce a major restructur­ing, shaft closures and job cuts to cope with a high-cost environmen­t, and, in the platinum sector, a largely stagnant price for its primary metal, platinum.

“In a phased approach, operations will therefore cease at Impala Rustenburg’s end-of-life and uneconomic shafts, with future mining activity focused on profitable, lower-cost, highvalue, and longer-life assets,” the company said.

The restructur­ing will cost R2.7bn during 2019 and 2020, and will be funded from internal cash resources as well as selling inventorie­s.

Implats now employs 40,000 people to produce 750,000oz of platinum a year.

Implats has already started the restructur­ing process and reduced its workforce from 42,300 in 2017. At 520,000oz it will fall below equally troubled Lonmin, which produces about 650,000oz of platinum a year.

Implats could consider selling some of the shafts it is planning to close, said chief executive Nico Muller.

“The only option for convention­al producers today is to fundamenta­lly restructur­e lossmaking operations to address cash burn and create lowercost, profitable businesses that are able to sustain operations and employment in a lower metal price environmen­t,” he said.

“While employee rationalis­ation is inevitable in a restructur­ing process of this nature, due care will be taken to ensure that job losses are minimised,” he said.

Implats has a backlog of metal worth R3.8bn locked up in its processing facilities because of a fire at one of its furnaces, reducing cash liquidity in the business.

To unlock this value, Implats agreed to sell forward some of the metal for R2bn, which it will receive before June 2019.

Implats has untapped loan facilities of R4bn and cash on hand of R2.2bn. With these resources and the forward payments, Implats has enough cash to fund the restructur­ing, Muller said.

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 ?? Picture: VATHISWA RUSELO ?? MAJOR RESTRUCTUR­ING: Impala Platinum is cutting its future production of the metal and slashing the number of its mines to six from 11, with thousands of jobs to go within two years.
Picture: VATHISWA RUSELO MAJOR RESTRUCTUR­ING: Impala Platinum is cutting its future production of the metal and slashing the number of its mines to six from 11, with thousands of jobs to go within two years.

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