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Production uncertainty at Impumelelo

24th October 2014

By: David Oliveira

Creamer Media Staff Writer

  

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Petrochemicals group Sasol’s mining subsidiary, Sasol Mining, has not yet been forthcoming on whether its new Impumelelo coal mine is providing material for its coal-to-liquids operations, in Secunda.

Impumelelo was scheduled to start production this quarter to replace Sasol Mining’s depleting Brandspruit colliery.

However, Sasol Mining confirmed to Mining Weekly in June that its R14-billion mine replacement programme, which includes the development of the Mpumalanga-based Impumelelo and Shondoni collieries, was, at that stage, on track for completion, within budget and on schedule.

Sasol Mining expects Impumelelo to reach beneficial operation in the first half of next year, while the Shondoni coal mine is expected to be productive in the latter half of next year.

Once at full production, Shondoni will deliver 10.5-million tons a year of streaming coal, while Impumelelo will initially produce 8.5-million tons a year, building up to 10.5-million tons a year of coal.

“An external funding facility of R2.5-billion for these projects has been secured and the first drawdowns have taken place,” Sasol’s then acting CFO Paul Victor added in an update to Sasol shareholders in June.

Mining Weekly reported in September 2013 that the sweeping replacement programme would see the coal miner, which produced 40-million tons of coal a year from one of the world’s largest underground coal mining complexes, replacing 60% of its coal production through four projects currently under way in Mpumalanga.

The four projects – Thubelisha, Impumelelo, Shondoni and Tweedraai – will replace the long-serving Twistdraai, Brandspruit, Middelbult and part of the Syferfontein operations.

Thubelisha was nearing completion in June and is scheduled to ramp up in the next two years to extend the life of the Twistdraai colliery to beyond 2043, while the much smaller Tweedraai project will replace part of the Syferfontein mine as an opencast operation.

Tweedraai will pass through Syferfontein’s high wall and incorporate the large 93-million-ton Block Four, which Sasol Mining was acquiring from Anglo American Thermal Coal and BHP Billiton, with Tweedraai eventually having six underground production sections.

Sasol Mining will be required to take a deci-sion on the next replacement mine in 2024, which is likely to involve Impumelelo’s remaining southern phases.

Their operating profit in the 2013 financial year was R2.2-billion, 3% down on the previous financial year, owing to lower export prices and higher operating costs.

Edited by Samantha Herbst
Creamer Media Deputy Editor

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