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    Good times beckon for Zim mining sector

    Zimbabwe's mining sector is headed for exciting times with foreign investors reportedly reaching lofty heights since the new dispensation rose to power, subsequently staging peaceful and successful harmonised polls, according to Mines and Mining Development Minister Winston Chitando.
    Mining Minister Winston Chitando. Photo: Bulawayo24
    Mining Minister Winston Chitando. Photo: Bulawayo24

    Chitando told delegates at Mine Entra 2018, that the mining sector was primed for massive injection of foreign capital, which over the years had constrained growth.

    While interest from foreign investors spanned across the entire range of over 40 minerals found in Zimbabwe, gold, which appears to have been hit the hardest by foreign investment drought, was positioned to benefit most. In fact, Chitando said he was expecting an investor soon who has expressed interest to invest $50m into the extraction of gold in the country.

    Mining is strategic to the Zimbabwe economy as it currently generates more than 60% of the country's annual export receipts and contributes between 12-16% of its gross domestic product.

    "At the onset of the new dispensation together with His Excellency The President (Mnangagwa) we went to Davos (for World Economic Forum meetings) and in other subsequent meetings with investors the appetite for investing in Zimbabwe has never been this high.

    "On Monday, I had a session (with investors) which had been arranged where I met 27 investors who are fronting companies and big fund managers that are participating on the London Stock Exchange. They requested a one on one with me, so I was there in London on Monday.

    "Twenty-seven big companies who participate on the London Stock Exchange worth $1bn, $2bn, $3bn. When the session was put together, the room ended up fitting only 27 people, but 45 had registered. So that appetite, which has been displayed will make sure that we are able to grow this industry," he said.

    The anticipated huge capital inflow would feed into various domestic interventions the government is planning to grow the mining sector to leverage the sector towards Government's Vision 2030.

    Middle income status

    Zimbabwe is targeting middle income status by 2030 with per capita income, currently around $1,200 anticipated to have quadrupled to $3,500 from $900 only in 2017.

    Minister Chitando said the government had lined up various support measures and interventions, some of which are mineral specific, as it targets growing the mining sector from being $3bn sector to a $12bn industry by 2023.

    For instance, in the gold mining sector, the government will establish gold service centres across the country with one already operational while a total of four are expected to be up and running by December.

    A mining industry support fund is being established to enable gold producers who need capital to expand production to access requisite financial resources.

    However,Chitando pointed out that the expansion was expected across the entire mining sector led by gold, platinum, nickel, lithium, coal, chrome and diamonds.

    This comes as major investments are anticipated in specific projects that include coal bed methane, $4,2bn Karo Resources, Tsingshan's, world's top producer of stainless steel's $1bn stainless steel project, Government's $400m diamond production recapitalisation and Great Dyke Investments' ongoing planned multi-million dollar investment into PGMs production in Darwendale.

    Tsingshan's, a Chinese company, will generate annual export returns to the tune of $2bn and the project will require double current ferrochrome output and 10 times increase in nickel, which are key inputs in production of stainless steel.

    Government, Chitando said, will also roll out various initiatives to support the activities of small-scale miners, who last year accounted for 43% of gold output.

    Further, all mineral production activity will be complemented by a robust beneficiation strategy to maximise returns from the sector.

    Source: allAfrica

    AllAfrica is a voice of, by and about Africa - aggregating, producing and distributing 2000 news and information items daily from over 130 African news organisations and our own reporters to an African and global public. We operate from Cape Town, Dakar, Lagos, Monrovia, Nairobi and Washington DC.

    Go to: http://allafrica.com/
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