FOCUS-South African coal miners turn to trucks as rail service deteriorates
04 May 2022
Poor
maintenance, a lack of spare parts for trains, copper cable theft and vandalism
have disrupted state logistics firm Transnet's freight rail services, causing
coal and iron ore exports to fall in recent years. In April, Transnet declared
force majeure on contracts with producers but with coal prices near record
highs, mining firms including Glencore have turned to trucks, one industry
source said.
In April, Transnet declared force majeure on contracts with producers but with
coal prices near record highs, mining firms including Glencore have turned to trucks, one industry
source said. A Glencore spokesperson declined to
comment. Trucking coal costs about four times more than rail, according to
miner Menar. It has started using trucks but said the high coal prices mean
miners can absorb the cost, for now.
"The industry at large is on their
knees, so they are resorting to drastic measures," said Clifford Hallett,
chief operating officer at Canyon Coal, a joint venture between Menar and
commodity trader Mercuria. At Canyon Coal's Khanye Colliery some 90 km (55
miles) from Johannesburg, it takes about 80 trucks -
each carrying 34 tonnes - to replace one average Transnet train, making it
unsustainable financially, boosting emissions and clogging roads.
But the company says it has little
choice. A year ago, it was loading five or six Transnet trains a week from
Khanye. That has dropped to just two or three now, and its stockpiles of coal
have been mounting, Hallatt said.
COAL PRICES ROCKET Demand, meanwhile,
has shot up since the war in Ukraine. The European Union has announced a ban on Russian coal and mining companies in South Africa say they are fielding calls from European countries looking for imports.
As for prices, Australian thermal coal futures were trading at
about $80 a tonne at the start of 2021. A week after Russia sent its forces into Ukraine, they rocketed to a record high of $440 and
are now trading at $326 a tonne. Menar is trucking about 120,000 tonnes of coal
a month and plans to increase that to 200,000 tonnes, Hallatt said.
As a whole, South African coal miners are putting about 400
trucks on the road a day, trucking some 6 million tonnes of coal on an
annualized basis, according to the industry source. "We are aware that
there's been an increase in the number of coal trucks now running into the
ports and that's not a good situation," Transnet Freight Rail Chief
Executive Sizakele Mzimela told Reuters.
Transnet shipped 58.3 million tonnes of
coal to the Richards Bay Coal Terminal last year, 24% below its annual capacity
of 77 million tonnes. Transnet expects an improvement in the delivery of coal
this year, to about 60 million tonnes. But limited rail capacity cost bulk
commodity exporters at least 35 billion rands ($2.2 billion) last year in lost
revenue, according to South Africa's Minerals Council.
Transnet's Mzimela said the state-owned
firm feels the industry's pain. "The frustration is more about the lost
opportunity, because of course if we were able to move more, we would benefit,
they would benefit. We are tied at the hip," she said.
OTHER OPPORTUNITIES? Mzimela said
Transnet was open to miners investing in their rolling stock, as well as
allowing private rail operators to run on some container route slots. But it
does not plan to open its iron ore and coal lines to private firms.
That falls short of what mining firms,
which are helping to fund private security to combat theft along rail lines,
want. Menar said it was pushing to invest in state-owned rail lines and procure
its locomotives and wagons as part of attempts to overcome the country's
infrastructure bottleneck.
Hallatt told Reuters that Menar would
also consider operating a section of the bulk commodity rail lines, although
that's an option Transnet's Mzimela rejects. Since the security collaboration
started, the number of drones monitoring the coal line from Mpumalanga to
Richards Bay has more than doubled and incidents have fallen to about 19 a week
from 35 previously, according to Transnet.
The copper cables carrying electricity
from substations along the line to signaling systems are regularly stolen, for
example, as well as other metal parts along the track. For the first time,
South Africa was ranked among the 10 least
attractive jurisdictions for mining investment in the Fraser Institute's annual
mining industry survey last year.
Gabrielle Reid, associate director for
strategic intelligence at S-RM, said the logistical challenges were now
prompting some South African miners to look outside the country
for growth opportunities. "Our most recent experiences with rail in South Africa make for a compelling diversification
case," July Ndlovu, chief executive of thermal coal producer Thungela
Resources, told analysts on a call in March.
"Given the concentration that we've
got in a single geography and the concentrated risk associated with that
infrastructure, I think it stands to reason that we should look at other
opportunities."
(This story has not been edited by
Devdiscourse staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)