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Gold Fields’ South African production now down to 13% – CEO

22nd February 2013

By: Martin Creamer

Creamer Media Editor

  

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Production from South Africa is now down to 13% of its total production, Gold Fields CEO Nick Holland said last week.

Prior to Gold Fields’ unbundling out of the company of its labour-intensive narrow-reef mines, South African production made up close to half of total production.

While Gold Fields’ international operations had an outstanding December quarter, the South African mines buckled under the country’s industrywide illegal strikes.

“Our production from South Africa was 48%. South Africa now drops to 13% of production post the deal,” Holland said after reporting a 7% decline in December-quarter gold production as a result of the wave of illegal strikes that hit the mining industry last year.

The fully mechanised 3 500- employee South Deep was the only remaining South African asset Gold Fields operated, as it now had a completely different profile after the hive-off of the Kloof, Driefontein and Beatrix gold mines to Sibanye Gold.

The new Gold Fields was now far more heavily weighted outside South Africa with its Tarkwa and Damang, in Ghana, St Ives and Agnew, in Australia, and Cerro Corona, in Peru.

Its project portfolio was made up of Arctic Platinum, in Finland, Far Southeast, in the Philippines, Chucapaca, in Peru, Yanfolila, in Mali, and exploration projects in North America with a sizeable reserve base of 64-million ounces of gold.

Excluding South Deep, which was still in build-up phase, the rest of the Gold Fields portfolio had a good profit margin of 25% after capital expenditure.

“These assets are cash generating,” Holland said.

This year’s ramp-up from South Deep was expected to ease the cash pressure on the non-South African part of the group.

The footprint of the South African corporate office had been cut and exploration had been reduced from $125-million to $80-million.

The company spent R2.5-billion at South Deep last year, where production was slightly below that of 2011 at 270 000 kg.

This year, the company expected to spend R1.85-billion, taking it over the hump of the capital required.

South Deep was being structured to advance the operation to a breakeven position in the second half of 2013, which was significant for the ‘new Gold Fields’, which no longer had the significant cash generation from the other assets.

Every asset now had to stand on its own and South Deep would have to “wash its own face”.

The opening up of the South Deep orebody through distress development had increased 75% and large open-stope cavities were being mined.

Destressing enabled mining at 3 000 m, with lower rock pressures of 50 MPa rather than 500 MPa, which was the key to opening up the orebody.

“We have a one-tenth impact in the distressed area,” said Holland, adding that the momentum was now there for South Deep. “We’re feeling a lot more confident about where we’re going.”

St Ives’ high-cost heap-leach operation had been terminated, the smaller Agnew was now generating cash after being the worst first-half performer, Tarkwa’s south heap-leach operation had been cut out, Damang’s three-million reserve ounces would be capitalised and a heap-leach operation was being considered to add to output at Cerro Corona, where costs were among the industry’s lowest.

Seven per cent lower group attributable gold production totalled 754 000 oz for the December quarter, down from the 811 000 oz achieved in the September quarter.

The illegal strikes were compounded by a slower-than-anticipated resumption of normal production following the cessation of the strikes.

Production at the Kloof Driefontein Complex (KDC) and Beatrix decreased by 30% from 316 000 oz in the September quarter to 220 000 oz in the December quarter.

The strike action during the December quarter resulted in the loss of 23 production days at KDC East, 27 production days at KDC West and 29 production days at Beatrix, as well as 110 000 oz of gold production during the quarter.

The JSE- and NYSE-listed Gold Fields had net earnings of R546-million in the December quarter, compared with R1 424- million in the September quarter and R2 605-million in the December 2011 quarter.

 

Edited by Martin Zhuwakinyu
Creamer Media Magazine Managing Editor

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