The Mercury

Ramaphosa moves to allay mining fears

Clear plans for expropriat­ion and Eskom

- DINEO FAKU dineo.faku@inl.co.za

PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa yesterday moved to allay investor jitters in the mining industry, charging that expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on would not involve taking away investors’ land and that the government was working on a clear plan to address problems that had besieged power utility Eskom.

Ramaphosa reiterated that the government’s land reform programme would not be chaotic and would be done within the confines of the constituti­on.

“Investors need not fear that their assets will be taken away from them, and we must applaud mining companies that have said we have surplus land that can be used to build houses,” Ramaphosa told the Investing in African Mining Indaba held in Cape Town.

Ramaphosa, who became the country’s first sitting president to address the annual indaba, said the government had envisioned the expropriat­ion of land without compensati­on as one of the measures to bring about land reform and redistribu­tion.

He said the government was also working hard to address the security and affordabil­ity of energy supply which the industry had raised as an impediment to its survival.

Eskom has requested a 15 percent tariff hike over the next three years as it languishes under a R400 billion debt.

The industry has warned that the tariff hike would see 150 000 job losses across the industry with the platinum and gold sectors expected to shed the most jobs. Ramaphosa also appointed a task team to advise the government on actions to resolve Eskom’s operationa­l, structural and financial challenges.

Ramaphosa admitted that Eskom was currently facing significan­t operationa­l, financial and structural challenges but assured the indaba that the government would be addressing them in the next few days.

“Eskom’s contributi­on to the health of our economy is too great for it to be allowed to fail,” Ramaphosa said. “It’s too important and is too big to fail. And we will not allow it to fail. Restoring and securing energy security for the country is an absolute imperative. In the coming days, we will be announcing a package of measures to stabilise and improve Eskom’s financial, operationa­l and structural position and to ensure security of energy supply for the country.”

Ramaphosa said mining remained key to the country’s economy. He said his government had invested time and resources in restoring the strained relations with the industry that characteri­sed the era of former mineral resources minister Mosebenzi Zwane.

Zwane’s gazetting of a controvers­ial mining charter in 2017 wiped R50bn off the market value of shares of listed mining companies on the day.

The gazetting of the charter widened the trust deficit with the Minerals Council South Africa, formerly known as the Chamber of Mines, approachin­g the court to have the mining charter reviewed and set aside.

“We have emerged from a period of strained relations where the courts became the main platform of engagement between industry and the government. We want to put that behind us,” he said. “We no longer want to meet you in court, we want to meet in your boardrooms and (Mineral Resources) Minister Gwede Mantashe’s office.”

Last year the government moved to bring clarity to the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Developmen­t Amendment Bill which is expected to bolster policy certainty.

Ramaphosa said administra­tive prices including rail, and electricit­y, as well as infrastruc­ture bottleneck­s, were a priority.

“Many thought mining was facing its sunset days. We are firm believers that the South African mining industry is in its rising sun days, and long will it last,” said Ramaphosa, adding that the government is in the process of addressing several concerns raised by business.

 ?? EPA-EFE ?? PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa addressing the Investing in African Mining Indaba at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre yesterday. |
EPA-EFE PRESIDENT Cyril Ramaphosa addressing the Investing in African Mining Indaba at the Cape Town Internatio­nal Convention Centre yesterday. |

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