Record blackouts shut South Africa’s mines

Bloomberg

Platinum and gold mines in South Africa stopped operations as the country was hit by record levels of rolling blackouts that are crippling key parts of the economy, threatening another recession.
Producers including Sibanye Gold Ltd, the world’s biggest platinum miner, recalled workers from underground and stopped milling ore after state-owned power utility Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd announced it would cut 6,000 megawatts from the grid to prevent a complete collapse.
The rolling blackouts, which continued for a sixth straight day , have a far-reaching and debilitating effect on the economy. In the first quarter, power cuts contributed to the biggest contraction in a decade. South Africa is the world’s main source of platinum-group metals, used primarily in autocatalysts.
Eskom downgraded the cuts to Stage 4, or 4,000 megawatts. The utility has experienced a raft of breakdowns as it struggles to maintain aging plants and grapples with faults at two giant new power stations, Medupi and Kusile. The utility has also blamed heavy rains that have soaked coal used as fuel.
While mining directly makes up only about 8% of gross domestic product, a shutdown in the industry will also hit manufacturing, which accounts for double that. The work stoppage will also weigh on South African exports, half of which is made up by mining products. That could again widen the deficit on the current account, which is one of the factors that keeps the rand and the economy vulnerable to global events.
“It does mean that the economy is heading for a recession,” Iraj Abedian, chief executive officer of Pan-African Investments and Research Services, said by phone from Johannesburg. Weak economic growth could lead to a further deterioration in public finances.

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