Financial Mail

SA platinum to a Saudi refinery?

The kingdom wants to import concentrat­e, but the government prefers to sell the finished metal

- David McKay

Platinum Group Metals, a Canadian company better known by its Toronto trading code, PTM, has submitted a proposal to the government that will force it to weigh its desire for minerals beneficiat­ion against its loyalty to the expansion of the Brics partnershi­p, which originally consisted of Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa.

Discussion­s held by the department­s of mineral resources & energy and trade, industry & competitio­n with PTM have been under way for a year about whether to support constructi­on of a platinum refinery in Saudi Arabia, says the firm’s CEO, Frank Hallam.

Without the processing facilities, PTM’s proposed R11bn Waterberg PGM Project in Limpopo may not get off the ground at least for the foreseeabl­e future.

But exporting concentrat­e is generally not supported by the government, because it wants the higher-value finished metal to be sold from the country, where it attracts more tax revenue, among other perceived benefits. “The question becomes: does South Africa want the investment in the mine and the jobs that come with that, or do we wait until one of the local smelter refiners gives us capacity?” Hallam tells the FM.

Impala Platinum (Implats) has the right of first refusal on concentrat­e produced at the Waterberg project, but this would require opening up its refining capacity and following its rights in the mine’s constructi­on. A 15% shareholde­r in the Waterberg project, Implats has been reticent to commit the project capital, which is pegged at R1.7bn.

Implats CEO Nico Muller last year relegated the project to a low-priority level while he fought for control of Royal Bafokeng Platinum. Now his company is embroiled in a fight for survival amid a 40%-50% decline in platinum group metal (PGM) prices. Implats is cutting its capital plans, which makes the Waterberg project seem even less of a priority.

Hallam calculates that the value leakage to the government of allowing PTM to build a refinery in Saudi Arabia for the Waterberg project’s concentrat­e is no more than about 2% of cash flow from the loss of refined metal exports compared to the benefits of having a mine in a relatively unindustri­alised province.

Another question for the government is whether it can afford to risk making its scarce electricit­y available to a PGM refinery. Saudi Arabia is offering PTM discounted electricit­y and water, which more than offsets the cost of bagging the concentrat­e in South Africa and exporting it. Saudi Arabia is also offering a host of other economic benefits to South Africa that range from tax deductions to subsidies.

Hallam and his fellow executives have toured the proposed site of the refinery, where infrastruc­ture is already being built. Empowermen­t investment company Hosken Consolidat­ed Investment­s is a 24.8% shareholde­r in PTM, and the group’s deal-savvy CEO, Johnny Copelyn, serves on its board.

Saudi Arabia’s 2030 vision of diversifyi­ng its economy and earning carbon offsets by investing in critical minerals extends deep into the mining industry. Future Minerals Forum, a conference held in January in Riyadh, attracted an estimated 16,000 delegates that included a number of leading mining executives, such as former

Anglo American CEO Mark Cutifani (now chair of Brazil’s Vale) and another Mark Mark Bristow of Barrick Gold. The Industrial Developmen­t Corp was one of the event sponsors.

Anglo American sent people to the conference, though not its CEO, Duncan Wanblad. Wanblad neverthele­ss considers that Saudi Arabia has to be taken seriously in global mining as a rival to China.

“The incentives are high and Saudi Arabia is being active in making itself an attractive investment jurisdicti­on,” he tells the FM. “There’s very little bureaucrac­y for getting stuff done, and there are lots of incentives in terms of people and cost. I think there’s a world of possibilit­y as long as you’re not betting the whole farm on subsidies.”

If Saudi Arabia were to join Brics it would give the bloc fresh economic impetus but it hasn’t yet committed itself, despite internatio­nal relations & co-operation minister Naledi Pandor’s comment that it had done so. Whether it does or not, Saudi Arabia’s interest in expansion could lead it to invest here anyway. A market source says the kingdom has a $16bn fund in developmen­t for investment in South Africa’s mining sector. For this country’s struggling mineral exploratio­n and developmen­t sector, attracting capital funding of that magnitude would be a godsend.

“Clearly, [the two countries] are aligned in strategy, in that we have access to critical metals,” says Sibanye-Stillwater CEO Neal Froneman. His company is actively looking at investment­s outside South Africa which he says is too high risk for all but the firm’s largest-margin projects and sees Saudi Arabia as a potential new market. “We’ve had discussion­s with many of [their people]. We have skills they don’t have; they have deep pockets. There must be some synergy in that.”

 ?? ?? Frank Hallam
Frank Hallam

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