Economic & Industrial

South Africa proposes 30% black ownership for mining firms within 5 years

South Africa proposes 30% black ownership for mining firms within 5 years
Mining News - South Africa plans to raise black ownership at permit-holding mining companies to 30% from 26% within five years, the latest draft of a hotly-contested new industry charter showed on Friday.
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The new draft charter extends to five years from one year the time that existing mining permit holders will have to meet the new black ownership requirement.
It also addresses a dispute over companies that were not recognised as having complied with black empowerment rules under the previous version of the charter, even when that was the result of a black investor selling shares.

"Publishing of the Charter moves us a step forward in terms of ensuring regulatory and policy certainty for the industry," Mines Minister Gwede Mantashe said in a statement.
Agreeing a new version of the charter is seen as instrumental to securing further investment in the mining sector, which new President Cyril Ramaphosa has made a priority.
The charter, published for public comment before being refined into law, is part of South African affirmative action rules that aim to reverse decades of exclusion under apartheid.
A new addition to the latest charter is that at least 50% of the seats on mining company boards will have to be allocated to black South Africans, and that at least 20% of those must go to black women.
For new mining right applicants, they must have a minimum of 30% black shareholding before securing the permit, according to the draft.
But the requirement that 10% of that ownership target be granted for free to communities and qualifying employees, dubbed `free carry`, might cause controversy among mining companies.
The Minerals Council South Africa, an industry lobby group, said it was against the free carry stipulation.
"The industry does not favour a requirement of 10% `free carry` on new mining rights as part of the proposed 30% BEE equity ownership target, as it would render uneconomic a significant proportion of potential new projects, and would undermine and constrain any prospects for growth in the sector and indeed the economy as a whole." MCSA said in a statement.
Other proposals in the charter include: new mining rights holders must pay 1% of core profit, or Ebitda, to employees and communities and that 70% the mining goods procurement budget must spent on South African made goods.


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