Engineering News and Mining Weekly

Exploratio­n deficit hampering sector

- HALIMA FROST | CREAMER MEDIA SENIOR WRITER

South Africa’s mineral exploratio­n sector is underperfo­rming, with as much as a 15-year deficit in terms of the required exploratio­n activity for a minerals- and mining- prolific country, posits industry employers’ associatio­n Minerals Council South Africa junior and emerging mining leadership forum chairperso­n Errol Smart.

With little to no major prospectin­g projects currently in the pipeline, the country has, in the past two decades, fallen from 5% of global exploratio­n expenditur­e, to less than 1%, with the greatest decline from 2020 to 2022.

“Importantl­y, one of the fundamenta­l reasons for the dip is the lack of an efficient, transparen­t, off-the-shelf cadastral system to manage mineral right applicatio­ns, transfers and sales,” he stresses.

Smart will be a panellist of a discussion, titled ‘South Africa’s empty exploratio­n pipeline’, at this year’s Investing in African Mining Indaba, during which the declining exploratio­n sector will be addressed.

“The Minerals Council has, for years, lobbied the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy for just such a system as one of the mechanisms to reignite South Africa’s exploratio­n sector.”

Exploratio­n is key to ensuring future mines can be built, as it typically takes up to 15 years for a mine to be found and developed, encompassi­ng the time it takes for the discovery of an economical­ly feasible mineral deposit to the constructi­on of a mine, he points out.

With the dearth of exploratio­n in the past two decades, recovery in this field of minerals developmen­t depends on the urgent creation of a regulatory and investment climate that attracts prospector­s, states Smart.

“This is vital as South Africa develops a critical minerals strategy and finds its place in the global supply and demand chain for these minerals.”

Smart points out that some of South Africa’s neighbouri­ng countries are better examples of how exploratio­n can be pursued, and where modern, off-the-shelf digital cadastral systems are deployed with great success.

Key Minerals Region

South Africa has many of the critical minerals needed for low-carbon economies and technologi­es to reduce reliance on fossil fuels and the impact of carbon emissions, including platinum group metals (PGMs), chrome, manganese, copper and rare-earth elements.

“While South Africa is mining many of these minerals, there are many more that could potentiall­y be found and extracted if the constraint­s on exploratio­n were lifted,” Smart notes.

For the sake of South Africa’s mining future, it is vital that these obstacles are unblocked, and that the benefits can start to flow through in the form of investment in mines, society and industry.

These investment­s will go towards bolstering the developmen­t of a modern and competitiv­e economy that realises the benefits of its mineral wealth for its citizens and the rest of the world, he adds.

Indaba Focus

Minerals Council has identified exploratio­n, the security of critical minerals, logistics, PGMs and the green hydrogen economy as key areas of interest for the Investing in African Mining Indaba.

Other topics in focus are issues such as proximity detection systems for mining machinery, mining sustainabi­lity standards and prosperity for near-mine communitie­s after mining.

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