Mining Charter III – A Way Forward

3rd February 2016

Mining Charter III – A Way Forward

Company Announcement - South Africa’s mining industry has long been one of the economy’s most visible drivers but more recently regulatory uncertainty, labour strife, the lack of a social compact between the government, labour and business, an accelerated global downturn in commodity prices and a move towards increased local beneficiation, have created a difficult operating environment for mining companies. This, in turn, has led to substantially sub-optimal levels of investment in the sector than anticipated.
 
It is against this backdrop that the time-bound compliance targets stipulated in the Mining Charter of 2004 and its successor, the 2010 Mining Charter and the key instruments used to drive socio-economic change and transformation in the South African mining industry, have expired. In addition, the outcome of the second major Mining Charter audit by the Department of Mineral Resources, released in May 2015, is not without controversy and this audit will probably be the catalyst for the third iteration of the Mining Charter.
 
Given these challenges and the need for a collaborative approach towards finding pragmatic solutions, Webber Wentzel hosted a series of seven lunch time sessions between August and November 2015, focusing on the development of Mining Charter III.  The sessions were attended by various stakeholders in the mining industry and took the form of round-table discussions facilitated by members of the Webber Wentzel Mining Sector Group and where appropriate, an industry expert.
 
The Sessions created a forum for key players in the mining industry to discuss and identify critical issues to be addressed in the preparation of Mining Charter III, with a view to positive engagement with the African National Congress’ Economic Transformation Committee and the DMR in order to maximise opportunities for investors, create regulatory certainty and drive growth and transformation of the mining industry.
 
In our view, the development of Mining Charter III presents a unique opportunity to bridge the trust deficit between government and the mining industry as well as introduce a long-term, clear and sustainable plan for the South African mining industry and downstream industries. 
 
Following is a synopsis of the findings, highlighting key principles that cross sections of industry stakeholders believe the third iteration of the Mining Charter will need to address. 

We have categorised these findings into six critical themes:

 
These themes permeate the elements of the Mining Charter set out below:
Ownership and Black Economic Empowerment

HDSA Ownership Requirements and the Potential Role of the State-Owned Mining Company

 Labour Relations

 
Procurement and Enterprise Development

Housing and Living Conditions

Beneficiation