Mineral beneficiation – Without political will, SADC will fall short
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By Ranga Mberi
THOUSANDS of years after the first miners dug up ore on 
the continent, Africans are yet to figure out just how best to benefit 
from their minerals.
Conventional thinking would have us believe mining only 
started when columns of colonials rolled in on their wagons, bargaining 
with locals, “discovering” gold and setting up the roots of the 
multinationals we see today.However, mining in Africa is in fact as old as time 
itself.
The Ngwenya Mines of Swaziland, according to UNESCO, were mined 
an astonishing 40 000 years ago. In Zimbabwe, as across Africa, there 
are heritage sites – many of which we have not protected well – that 
show pre-colonial African expertise in mining.
While they traded much of their minerals, a lot of what 
they dug up ended up on their necks and wrists as ornaments, or as tools
 for farming and hunting. They were practising what today, centuries 
later, is being debated in boardrooms, convention centres and in all 
sorts of scholarly articles – mineral beneficiation.
Across Africa, next to resource nationalism, governments 
are talking up beneficiation, or value addition, as the next frontier in
 making sure Africa benefits more than it has, for centuries, from its 
vast mineral wealth.
It is not a new debate. The AU Mining Vision, published in
 2009, sought to find ways of driving this agenda. That document came at
 the crest of the commodities boom, which had seen many mineral-rich 
African countries boost their economies.
There was just one problem with all that. Mineral prices 
move in cycles. African countries that have depended on resources such 
as oil and metals know this all too well; you rely too much on 
resources, and you are setting yourself up for trouble when prices 
suddenly go through the floor.
The AU then came up with a plan. African countries, it 
said, needed to ensure its minerals turned its economies into 
diversified industrial hubs. No more should they just export minerals in
 raw form, but they should use those minerals to drive industrial growth
 at home.
It was a vision proposed in many plans at national and 
regional levels. Among these were the Lagos Plan of Action, SADC Mineral
 Sector Programme, Mining Chapter of NEPAD, and the Africa Mining 
Partnership.
However, beneficiation takes more hard work than it appears.
Mining is capital intensive. Projects are funded decades 
in advance, and by funders that demand assurances on resources and 
guarantees on markets.
It will not only be the mines that will need a culture shift. Governments too will have to change their approach.
A good place to start is South Africa, the continent’s mining powerhouse.
A paper by South Africa’s Department of Mineral Resources 
(DMR) found that it could not force beneficiation on mining companies 
without first ensuring “intensive co-ordination” across a range of its 
departments. The DMR found it needed to build new links between dozens 
of departments; mineral resources, economic development, trade and 
industry, science and technology, public enterprises, energy and 
treasury, as well as business and labour.
Secondly, does Africa have the necessary infrastructure? 
Beneficiation is an energy-intensive industry. It means the smelting and
 re-smelting of production. Can our African power plants, already 
struggling to cope with existing industries, meet the demand? Can we 
supply power to these plants at competitive tariffs?
Thirdly, once we have produced all those value added 
products, do we have the markets? Are we able to sell them at 
competitive prices? Can we compete with the skills of jewelers in Italy 
or the low labour costs of India?
How much have our African governments invested into 
research and development? 
Zimbabwe has recently sent diamond cutters for
 training in China. It is a good step, but do we have enough skills 
training plans to sustain all this going forward?
An idea would be to integrate regionally, and build, for 
example, regional jewelry hubs. However, given the lethargy of regions 
such as SADC on integration, is there much hope for this?
One can imagine governments developing special economic 
zones that are exempt from duty and VAT for manufacturers. Factories 
would need access to inputs at competitive prices. They would need good 
incentives to invest in R&D.
The solution lies in our governments’ ability to make it 
attractive for manufacturers to add value to our resources. They must be
 able to do that at low cost, with good skills, using clean, affordable 
energy. Only then would our products compete.
So, while beneficiation sounds nice in the bid boardrooms 
and conference centers, the reality is somewhat tougher. Achieving it 
will take huge political will, the likes of which many African 
governments still find hard to muster – even after 40 000 years of 
mining.
