Mining Mirror June 2018 | Page 3

Comment A protagonist in the twilight zone Get in touch @LeonLouw3 [email protected] T he South African mining industry is stuck in a twilight zone somewhere between the Zuma-torpor and Cyril’s ‘new dawn’. While slowly awakening from a winter slumber filled with nightmares, it appears that the industry is still rubbing its eyes to get rid of the last bit of gunk. Unsure whether the ‘new dawn’ is for real, most are trying to make sense of it all. Many have not yet committed serious capital for exploration projects to confirm their willingness to enter a long-term relationship with the new South African leadership. And who can blame them? Now political and social pariahs, it was only seven months ago that a brazen Indian family and a deceptive quasi-aristocrat called the shots. Since then, the cabal has been banished and new ministers appointed. Furthermore the (new) Minister of Mines has been consulting with all stakeholders across the country, and the new President has unleashed a pack of ‘lions’ to lure investors to the reinvigorated light of the South African dawn. It all sounds like a fable written many moons ago, when Africa was still the mysterious continent of Joseph Conrad’s Heart of Darkness. But it is true, and the reality will unfortunately take time to sink in. The fact is that President Ramaphosa and Minister Mantashe, in a few months, have made more progress in getting the country, and especially the mining industry, on the high road again, than what Zwane and Zuma could ever have dreamt of. Mantashe’s urgency in finalising the Mining Charter is another feather in his cap. His role in negotiating a new deal has been immense, and his stature as non-corruptible politician and astute negotiator continues growing. He is highly respected and extremely popular among communities, labour, mining companies, and the media, and has been one of the main protagonists in the evolution of South Africa’s democracy. I suspect that Gwede Mantashe’s praises will be sung long after Zuma, Zwane, Atul, Ajay, and Duduzani no longer feature as antagonists in the South African discourse. The Mining Charter will not be perfect, and there will always be a disgruntled group. But by consulting widely, and setting deadlines, Mantashe has proven that government is serious about getting the show on the road. Regulatory certainty is a selling point that would make Manuel, Jonas, Maree, and Langeni’s (the four lions’) life so much easier in their endeavour to hunt down foreign investors. The rampant Ramaphosa and Mantashe show will be difficult to contain, but there are opposition groups hell-bent on derailing their efforts. They are in the minority, though, and as the country enters a new chapter, mining companies are now in a better position than ever to throw the dice and hope for the best in the unfolding South African saga. Leon Editor JUNE 2018 MINING MIRROR [1]