COVID-19

South African mines affected by lockdown

Rio Tinto is among the miners impacted by government order

This article is 4 years old. Images might not display.

Mining Magazine is making some of its most important coverage of the COVID-19 pandemic freely available to readers. For more coverage, please see our COVID-19 hub. To subscribe to Mining Magazine, click here.

Rio will curtail production at Richards Bay Minerals by midnight on Thursday.

The titanium operation was previously suspended for five weeks late last year due to security issues.

Rio will make arrangements for furnaces to be put on care and maintenance in order to avoid damage to their continuous operations, and is yet to resume construction of the Zulti South project.

The company said it was too early to speculate when operations would resume or what the impact on guidance would be.

Rio will also reduce activity at its aluminium operations in Quebec, in line with government orders.

"The health and safety of our people is Rio Tinto's key priority and we are supportive of the action being taken by various governments to address the threat of COVID-19," Rio CEO Jean-Sébastien Jacques said.

"We will continue to work with our employees, customers, communities and suppliers to minimise any impact of action being taken to reduce the spread of COVID-19."

South African manganese producer Jupiter Mines will also suspend the Tshipi Borwa mine, which shipped 3.4 million tonnes in the 12 months to February 29.

The company will assess the impact with its partners.

Developer Orion Minerals has closed its Prieska copper-zinc site and is completing the updated feasibility study remotely.

The company has postponed project financing activities until market conditions stabilise, but is continuing discussions with parties over a potential project-level equity investment.

"While we have made the decision to postpone debt financing activities for Prieska until global market conditions stabilise, we are fortunate that the company will shortly be finalising its active feasibility study work and permitting activities, with a resultant reduction in spending requirements," Orion managing director Errol Smart said.

"We will be able to weather the storm by dramatically reducing spending, while preserving a top-class, build-ready base metal project that can be activated as soon as global manufacturing and metal demand recommences."  

Other big miners to be impacted by South Africa's move include Glencore, Anglo American, Gold Fields, Sibanye-Stillwater and Harmony Gold.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the mining sector, brought to you by the Mining Magazine Intelligence team.

A growing series of reports, each focused on a key discussion point for the mining sector, brought to you by the Mining Magazine Intelligence team.

editions

Mining Magazine Intelligence: Automation and Digitalisation Report 2024

Exclusive research for Mining Magazine Intelligence Automation and Digitalisation Report 2024 shows mining companies are embracing cutting-edge tech

editions

ESG Mining Company Index: Benchmarking the Future of Sustainable Mining

The ESG Mining Company Index report provides an in-depth evaluation of ESG performance of 61 of the world's largest mining companies. Using a robust framework, it assesses each company across 9 meticulously weighted indicators within 6 essential pillars.

editions

Mining Magazine Intelligence Exploration Report 2024 (feat. Opaxe data)

A comprehensive review of exploration trends and technologies, highlighting the best intercepts and discoveries and the latest initial resource estimates.

editions

Mining Magazine Intelligence Future Fleets Report 2024

The report paints a picture of the equipment landscape and includes detailed profiles of mines that are employing these fleets