The Mercury

Gold sector shivers at steep power, wage hikes

- Peroshni Govender and Zandi Shabalala

ANGLOGOLD Ashanti said yesterday steep wage demands and rising power costs could turn South Africa’s once thriving gold sector into a “sunset” industry.

AngloGold, which reported that it had swung to a quarterly profit on robust performanc­e in its internatio­nal operations sending its shares 5 percent higher, said looming wage and electricit­y tariff rises were a concern.

“We cannot have year-onyear discussion­s on wages without any economic consequenc­es. That effectivel­y creates a sunset industry for gold mining in South Africa,” chief executive Srinivasan Venkatakri­shnan said, referring to the salary demands.

The National Union of Mineworker­s, which represents more than half of the workers in the gold sector, is seeking increases of up to 75 percent in the basic pay for entry-level workers to R10 000 a month.

Eskom has requested the energy regulator to approve a 25.3 percent increase for 2015/16 in electricit­y tariffs, which would include a previous 12.69 percent granted in March.

AngloGold said this too would hurt the gold sector, where profit margins were under pressure.

South Africa is facing its worst electricit­y crisis since 2008 and Eskom cuts power almost daily in order to prevent its grid from collapsing as the utility battles with breakdowns and a huge maintenanc­e backlog.

“As an industry, we can’t take kindly to the fact that a service provider says I can’t control my costs, so give me an increase,” said Venkatakri­shnan. “We manage our costs and request other service providers to manage their costs.”

He said power made up 7 percent of AngloGold’s costs in 2010 but this had risen by up to 25 percent despite the gold producer having slashed its consumptio­n by 20 percent under an agreement with Eskom meant to reduce supply to big power users.

The company said robust performanc­e in AngloGold’s internatio­nal operations, which benefited from lower oil prices, helped to offset lower South African production.

This raised adjusted headline earnings to 9 US cents a share from a loss of 29 cents in the three months to December.

Production fell to 969 000 ounces from 1 055 million ounces a year earlier, partly affected by a slow start in South Africa after the Christmas break and the sale of a mine.

Its shares closed 0.67 percent up at R134.21–

 ?? PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI ?? AngloGold Ashanti chief Srinivasan Venkatakri­shnan says the gold sector could turn into a “sunset” industry.
PHOTO: SIMPHIWE MBOKAZI AngloGold Ashanti chief Srinivasan Venkatakri­shnan says the gold sector could turn into a “sunset” industry.
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