Mining production fell in November

5th February 2021 By: Theresa Bhowan-Rajah - journalist

Mining production fell in November

GEOFF NÖLTING kdowns both domestically and abroad would likely hamper any meaningful recovery in the sector in the short to medium term

As a consequence of renewed lockdown regulations in key trading partner countries, domestic mining production took a nosedive in November as it dropped by 11.6% year-on-year (y/y). This likely diminished hopes of a significant recovery in the sector for the fourth quarter as output levels returned to those of July.

From January to November 2020 mining production was down 11.8%, compared with the same period in 2019, says financial institution First National Bank economist Geoff Nölting.

The decline in the headline number is mainly attributable to iron-ore production, which plunged 35.3% y/y and detracted 3.9 percentage points (ppt). Other notable detractors were declines in the production of platinum-group metals (PGMs) (–16.1% y/y and –3.4ppt), manganese ore (–15.9% y/y and –1.5ppt) and coal –5.9% y/y and –1.5ppt).

Of the 12 mineral groups, diamond production was the only division that recorded an expansion; up 56% y/y.

Concerningly, on a seasonally adjusted basis, mining production declined for the third consecutive month, registering –5.7% month-over-month in November, following declines of 0.7% and 0.8% in October and September respectively. In the three months ended November, mining production slowed to 6.3% quarter-on-quarter (q/q), from 17.4% q/q in October.

Lockdowns both domestically and abroad would likely hamper any meaningful recovery in the sector in the short to medium term, Nölting stated. Further, if the recent bouts of load-shedding are not addressed, then the longer-term prospects for the industry remain dim as business confidence will remain low and investment in new projects muted. The sector also faces other challenges such as logistical bottlenecks, high electricity costs and low global competitiveness.

The recovery in the mining sector is crucial for the overall economy as roughly 400 000 people are employed in the sector. Additionally, the sector makes up about a third of export receipts and is an important contributor to the fiscus, Nölting concluded.