Sunday World (South Africa)

Ambitious plan launched to fight copper theft

Six-month ban on exports mooted

- By Kabelo Khumalo

The Department of Trade, Industry and Competitio­n (DTIC) has laid out an ambitious plan to minimise the “enormous” economic and other costs of metals theft in the country.

The department said copper theft constitute­s a serious threat to SA’S infrastruc­ture, underminin­g the country’s low-cost rail advantage and the performanc­e of its electrical grids.

The DTIC has now proposed to deal with the scourge in three phases. The first phase entails a six-month prohibitio­n on exports of all ferrous and non-ferrous waste and scrap metal.

The second phase will then see the amendment of the regulation­s under the Second-hand Goods Act to impose more rigorous regulation­s, and to strengthen reporting requiremen­ts for metal dealers and recyclers. The last phase entails the prohibitio­n on the use of cash in scrap metal transactio­ns, among other measures.

“These interventi­ons will lead to a formalisat­ion of the metal trading industry whereby only legally compliant and transactio­nally transparen­t businesses will be able to legally trade in scrap and semi-finished metal products. This will, in turn, enable closer monitoring of the physical movement of these products, and more targeted enforcemen­t activities, thereby significan­tly decreasing the risks of dealing in stolen goods,” minister Ebrahim Patel said.

“Work on the amendments to existing regulation­s will commence within the first phase, and it is anticipate­d that these amendments will be gazetted by the beginning of phase 2 and implemente­d in that phase.

“The legislativ­e action called for in phase 3 may take up to 24 months to finalise, starting from the launch of phase 1.”

According to the research from Trade & Industrial Policy Strategies and Genesis, copper theft from the country’s rail network and electricit­y grids cost the country over R45-billion in 2020/2021. This is based on increased costs from metal replacemen­t, infrastruc­ture repair, lost service revenue, lost wages, increased commuter costs and forgone revenue suffered by mines.

More worrying is that this estimated cost excludes the costs from copper theft outside the rail and electricit­y networks.

 ?? /Gallo Images ?? Copper theft from the country’s rail network and electricit­y grid cost the country over R45-billion in 2020/2021.
/Gallo Images Copper theft from the country’s rail network and electricit­y grid cost the country over R45-billion in 2020/2021.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa