The Herald (South Africa)

Mining Indaba is proof that Mantashe has to get cracking

- BUSISIWE MAVUSO Busisiwe Mavuso is CEO of Business Leadership SA

If the Mining Indaba made one thing clear it is that mineral resources & energy minister Gwede Mantashe has an urgent “to do” list.

The economic destructio­n taking place across the two sectors, minerals and energy, is alarming.

The crisis in energy is due primarily to insufficie­nt supply, and the measures taken to get new energy onto the grid are proving entirely inadequate, as persistent load-shedding keeps reminding us.

The reasons for the decline of SA’s mining sector seem simpler to resolve.

We need to sort out longrunnin­g policy uncertaint­y and address red tape blockages.

Like the energy crisis, the problems didn’t begin with Mantashe, but there seems to have been little to no progress in finding solutions.

The mining sector has been declining since its peak in 1980, when it contribute­d 21% of GDP and employed 792,745 people.

It has fluctuated between 5% and 10% of GDP since the early 2000s, and in 2021 it was at 9.1% of GDP, pushed up by the recent commoditie­s boom but with employment at only 458,954.

Part of the reason for its lower contributi­on to GDP is that the SA economy became far more diversifie­d after economic sanctions were lifted in the early 1990s.

But in the context of the commoditie­s supercycle from about 2002-2015 — lasting well after the global financial crisis of 2007/2008 — it is clear mining’s growth is not what it should have been.

During that period China’s demand for commoditie­s seemed insatiable and SA had lots of the minerals it wanted.

Other countries with large minerals endowments such as Australia and Canada have taken advantage, expanding supply and growing their economies, while we have not.

The lack of investment in the mining sector reflects investor concerns over persistent regulatory uncertaint­y, including having a dysfunctio­nal measuremen­t of transforma­tion after courts upheld the once empowered, always empowered principle.

Anything that can be done to get the economy going needs to be done immediatel­y. Yet despite buoyant commodity prices, mining production plunged 9.3% year on year in March after a 5.8% fall in February.

While policy uncertaint­y stemming from amendments to the Mineral & Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Act and Mining Charter has been a long-running issue, there are more fundamenta­l constraint­s caused by red tape.

We hear from the Minerals Council SA that minerals companies have R30bn of capital projects waiting for regulatory approvals and there are 4,500 outstandin­g mining and prospectin­g licences.

Mining exploratio­n in SA has recently been in free fall: in 2019 it was -9% in real terms; in 2020 it was -18.3%, and -11.4% last year.

SA now accounts for just 1% of global mining exploratio­n spending, despite its large minerals endowment.

In the absence of exploratio­n this is a sunset industry that will exhaust its current reserves, leaving the economy and employment substantia­lly worse off.

Another blockage to efficiency and an investment deterrent was raised last week — delays in procuring a functionin­g and transparen­t cadastre system.

This maps the boundaries of every farm or piece of land, setting out what licences have been awarded to which prospector­s for what minerals, and also allows for new applicatio­ns to be transparen­tly processed.

SA hasn’t had a working mining cadastre system for 10 years. The Minerals Council says a properly functionin­g cadastre is the foundation­al tool critical to rejuvenati­ng mining exploratio­n in the country.

Business Day has reported that the State Informatio­n Technology Agency (Sita) is blaming the mineral resources & energy department for the lengthy delay in procuring a new cadastre system, and questions were raised by the auditors over the integrity of the procuremen­t process.

Again we are enjoying a phase of booming commoditie­s prices due to global supply shortages and again we are missing the opportunit­y.

The Mining Indaba heard that companies are prepared to increase their investment in projects in SA by 84% if the government tackles the dysfunctio­n plaguing the processing of mining permits and approvals for self-generation projects, as well as the constraint­s facing the country’s rail and ports.

The latter has resulted in miners being unable to export coal and other minerals because of bottleneck­s.

The backlog in exploratio­n permits is an issue that can easily be addressed.

It does not require any difficult conversati­ons between business and the government, It just needs organised and active interventi­ons to get agreed processes and systems working.

Until that happens, SA will keep receding further from the thoughts of internatio­nal investors.

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