• Latest
  • Trending
  • All
  • News
  • Business
  • Politics
  • Science
  • World
  • Lifestyle
  • Tech

Zambia: Nationalizing Zambia’s Copper Mines

March 15, 2021
Health and Safety in African Mining

Health and Safety in African Mining

June 9, 2023
Shareholders Plan Legal Action Against Mining Company For Unethical Chrome Sale

Shareholders Plan Legal Action Against Mining Company For Unethical Chrome Sale

April 29, 2023
advertisement
ADVERTISEMENT
B.E.D. Cape Town Branch: Consistency, Customer Service and Teamwork

B.E.D. Cape Town Branch: Consistency, Customer Service and Teamwork

April 29, 2023
Armcoil and Schneider Electric Partner to Deliver SKID Substations to Prominent Mining Group

Armcoil and Schneider Electric Partner to Deliver SKID Substations to Prominent Mining Group

April 29, 2023
Zest WEG’s Expanded Middelburg Branch – Improving Services and Delivery for Customers

Zest WEG’s Expanded Middelburg Branch – Improving Services and Delivery for Customers

April 29, 2023
Clear Gear™ Lubricant Sets a New Benchmark for Reliability in Mining

Clear Gear™ Lubricant Sets a New Benchmark for Reliability in Mining

April 30, 2023
The Agreement to Sell Three of Sappi’s European Graphic Paper Mills to the Aurelius Group Lapses

The Agreement to Sell Three of Sappi’s European Graphic Paper Mills to the Aurelius Group Lapses

April 29, 2023
One Platform to Rule All: Guanajuato Silver Selects Micromine

One Platform to Rule All: Guanajuato Silver Selects Micromine

April 29, 2023
Unlocking Value From Data To Drive Better Business Results

Unlocking Value From Data To Drive Better Business Results

June 6, 2023
Global Energy Leaders Named in Africa Oil Week Advisory Committee

Global Energy Leaders Named in Africa Oil Week Advisory Committee

April 29, 2023
Sappi’s Platinum Sustainability Status Is Once Again Verified by EcoVadis

Sappi’s Platinum Sustainability Status Is Once Again Verified by EcoVadis

April 25, 2023
Rosond Appoints Geotechnical Project Coordinator

Rosond Appoints Geotechnical Project Coordinator

April 25, 2023
  • African Mining Brief
  • Magazine Archive
  • Contacts
Saturday, June 10, 2023
African Mining Brief
No Result
View All Result
  • Login
  • Home
  • News
  • Events
  • Industry
  • People
  • Projects
  • Press Releases
  • Magazine Archive
MAGAZINE ARCHIVE
ADVERTISE
  • Home
  • News
  • Events
  • Industry
  • People
  • Projects
  • Press Releases
  • Magazine Archive
No Result
View All Result
African Mining Brief
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Events
  • Industry
  • People
  • Projects
  • Press Releases
  • Magazine Archive
Home Africa

Zambia: Nationalizing Zambia’s Copper Mines

by Jimmy Swira
March 15, 2021
in Africa
0

File: Edgar Lungu, is the current President of Zambia since since January 2015.

491
SHARES
1.4k
VIEWS
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter

By Glory Mushinge

The Zambian government has taken over operations at a major copper mining company in what is seen as a move towards increasing its direct control of the key mining sector. Economists are urging Lusaka to tread carefully.

Economists in Zambia paid close attention when the government announced that it would acquire Mopani Copper Mines Limited. The copper and cobalt exporting firm is jointly operated by companies based in Switzerland and Canada. The Zambian government owns only 10% of the company.

There had been a string of conflicts with the Swiss-based Glencore plc and Canada-based First Quantum Minerals Limited over a temporary shutdown of its mines in the northern Copperbelt Province. The points of contention were due to the COVID pandemic and retrenchments, taxes, and electricity pricing.

For John Tembo, a resident in Lusaka, the government’s Mopani mine takeover could be a double-edged sword. “The people who are going to retire, where is the money going to come from?” Tembo posed. “If the government is taking over, they have to do it in the quickest way by paying off the retirees,” Tembo told DW.

More than 73,000 people are employed in Zambia’s extractive industry, representing 2.4% of the workforce in the southern African nation of nearly 18 million people.

“The mines need to belong to the government and not foreigners. The opposite means the country’s minerals only benefit foreigners,” Emmanuel Chisala, a Lusaka resident, told DW.

Vague takeover details

Little about the deal valued at $1.5 billion (€1.2 billion) has been made public. Still, speculation is swirling over the government’s end game and the effect it could have on Zambia’s bid to win a desperately-needed International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout loan.

“The Mopani mine takeover is a good idea because Zambia needs to be in charge of its assets,” Jerice Anosis, who resides in the capital, told DW. “My worry is how Zambia will pay back the debt because right now we owe a lot. We have a lot of debt to pay.”

The Mopani deal will be financed through a loan to be serviced via its future sales, according to economist Professor Oliver Saasa. Zambia, he said, plans to repay that loan by giving Glencore creditors 3% of the mine’s revenue. That would transpire over the next three years, after which the creditors will receive between 10% and 17.5%, he said.

If big companies slow down on big investments because of Mopani Copper Mines’ fate, mining consultant Ron Smit said that developments in the sector are likely to stall.

“These actions by government that look like they are unilateral, are never, never good in any country,” Smit told DW. “You would really hope for a sector where government and the industry are in better conversations with each other so that these issues can be avoided.”

Are gold mines next?

Zambia’s government appears to have its eye on the gold mining sector too. Lusaka reportedly plans to start buying gold directly from miners to bolster foreign reserves, which it says will speed up economic recovery.

But Smit said this places any government in the impossible position of being both a player and a referee on the same field.

“I am very much in favor of very strong governance over the mining sector, but I’ am not in favor of government ownership of mines or any other industry for that matter.”

President Edgar Lungu is pushing for Zambians to secure majority stakes in selected strategic mines to benefit from their country’s mineral wealth beyond taxes.

Mining accounts for 77% of Zambia’s total exports, nearly 28% of government revenues also come from the sector, according to the Zambia Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI).

Zambia’s debt challenges

Professor Saasa is just one of several experts warning the government to consider the effects that the deal could have on the country facing a hard fiscal crisis and the liquidity challenges it could bring to the copper mining company. “It is sending another signal, whether real or perceived, that Zambia is a difficult environment in which to do business.” Chibamba Kanyama, a Zambian economist, told DW.

According to Kanyama, the acquisition of more debt might make the IMF question Zambia’s seriousness about debt sustainability. Zambia entered negotiations with the global financial institution for a loan after it became the first country in Africa to default on its debt since the pandemic started. Experts say that loan is unlikely to come by election time in August 2021.

“It makes us get very concerned as to whether we have understood all the risks that pertain to mining and whether we have put adequate measures to control that,” Kanyama said.

Read the original article on DW.COM 

Tags: CoppergovernmentnationalisationZambia
Share196Tweet123
Jimmy Swira

Jimmy Swira

Jan - March 2023 Magazine

Health and Safety in African Mining

Health and Safety in African Mining

June 9, 2023
Shareholders Plan Legal Action Against Mining Company For Unethical Chrome Sale

Shareholders Plan Legal Action Against Mining Company For Unethical Chrome Sale

April 29, 2023
B.E.D. Cape Town Branch: Consistency, Customer Service and Teamwork

B.E.D. Cape Town Branch: Consistency, Customer Service and Teamwork

April 29, 2023

Trending News

  • Business Maverick Zunaid Moti Announces Departure from Moti Group

    Business Maverick Zunaid Moti Announces Departure from Moti Group

    1056 shares
    Share 422 Tweet 264
  • Scraper Winch

    692 shares
    Share 277 Tweet 173
  • Thyssenkrupp Uhde Expertise Extends the Life of Ammonia Tanks

    636 shares
    Share 254 Tweet 159
  • Slope Stability

    618 shares
    Share 247 Tweet 155
  • Underground Support Systems

    599 shares
    Share 240 Tweet 150
  • Another successful turnkey modular construction and transit solution from thyssenkrupp Uhde delivered to a key customer

    597 shares
    Share 239 Tweet 149
  • African Mining Brief
  • Magazine Archive
  • Contacts

© 2023 African Mining Brief I All Rights Reserved Powered by Clivo.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • News
  • Events
  • Industry
  • People
  • Projects
  • Press Releases
  • Magazine Archive

© 2023 African Mining Brief I All Rights Reserved Powered by Clivo.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In