COPPER GETS A ZAMBIAN TAX BOOST

Zambia is looking to position itself as Africa’s top copper producer in the next decade, reclaiming a ranking it lost to the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in 2014.President Hakainde Hichilema’s government, which came to power in August, hopes to ramp up annual copper production from 800,000t to 3Mt — against the DRC’s 1.2Mt — to ride the commodity boom and boost investment in a sector that accounts for 80% of Zambia’s foreign exchange earnings and 11% of GDP.Copper prices at the London Metal Exchange hover at about $10,000/t, having climbed to a record $10,747.50 last year. And finance minister Situmbeko Musokotwane expects them to rise even further, given increased demand from industries such as the electric vehicle manufacturing sector.”Copper is expected to be as lucrative as oil was in the mid-1970s,” Musokotwane said in his national budget address in October. “The ‘new dawn’ administration will facilitate the increase in copper output from the current 800,000t to over 3Mt …

Read more: https://www.businesslive.co.za/fm/features/africa/2022-02-10-copper-gets-a-zambian-tax-boost/

CEC GETS LIONS SHARE ON LUSE TRADING

COPPERBELT Energy Corporation (CEC) Plc was the best performer last week as the Lusaka Securities Exchange (LuSE) closed trading at over K28.55 million from about K8.6 million turnover the previous week. CEC accounted for a bulk of almost K13.17 million while the rest was shared among 19 companies that participated in 544 trades. The increase in turnover entails that the local bourse witnessed increased market activity.

“In the week ended February 4, 2022, a total of 14,301,180 shares were transacted in 544 trades, yielding a market turnover of K28,570,354.

“This is compared to a total of 1,387,654 shares transacted in 590 trades, yielding a market turnover of K8,684,471 in the week ended January 28, 2022,” the LuSE weekly newsletter stated. British American Tobacco Zambia was second, accounting for K12.23 million, and Standard Chartered Bank Zambia at K2.78 million. Other companies that participated but their

Read more: http://www.daily-mail.co.zm/cec-gets-lions-share-on-luse-trading/

INCREASE IN COPPER PRODUCTION TO BOOST INVESTMENTS – CHIKWANDA

GOVERNMENT’S intentions in the increase of copper production from 700 thousand metric tones to 3 million will boost investments in the mining sector, says Energy expert Johnstone Chikwanda.  

Mr Chikwanda said the mining sector gave the country more Forex compared to other sectors hence boosting the economy.

He said that the increased copper production would promote youth empowerment as the production of copper will be intensified 

Mr Chikwanda notes that the increase of copper production will also help the expansion and development of new mines 

 “The expansion in the mining industry will require to expand the supply of energy in order to support the mining sector,” he said. 

 

Source: https://dailynationzambia.com/2022/02/increase-in-copper-production-to-boost-investments-chikwanda/

PRESIDENT HAKAINDE HICHILEMA -MAKING ZAMBIANS DREAM AGAIN

The story of President Hakainde Hichilema validates the saying that “Dreams don’t always come true without a lot of failures”.

With over 23 years of fighting for a better Zambia, quitting was never something he considered. Enduring many trials and tribulations from the heavy hand of an authoritarian regime – his perseverance has been one for the books and now the dawn of a new era is upon Zambians.

President HH, as he is fondly called by Zambians, is doing is a physical representation of his dreams for a better Zambia. On August 12, 2021, Zambians voted against all vices associated with poor governance. They voted against violence, arrogance, economic ruin, democratic desecration and all manner of criminality and Hichilema is making sure that the majority of Zambians don’t regret their choice.

There is a fresh breath in the status of Zambian democracy, human rights and rule of law. Before now, there were numerous complaints of the curtailment of press freedom, reduction in civil liberties and human rights such as freedom of expression and freedom of assembly and the deterioration in the rule of law.

There is no shadow of a doubt that President Hichilema has restored some normalcy in the Zambian society as far as democracy, human rights and rule of law is concerned. Freedom of speech and the press have been restored, and even those who did not allow others to express themselves are now able to do so.

There is a general air of freedom and lack of fear among Zambians today. It is undeniable that the HH’s New Dawn administration has performed well so far.

President HH is also making giant strides in turning around Zambia economic prospects. It is a fact that the Zambian economy was mismanaged in the last decades, but since the birth of the Hichilema administration, the economic trajectory for Zambia has been generally positive, both in intangible and tangible terms. In terms of intangibles, both local and foreign investors’ confidence in the Zambian economy has gone up. In terms of a few economic metrics, the exchange rate of the kwacha has improved from a high of K23 to K17/18 to a US dollar. The rate of inflation has dropped from 24.4% to 19.1% in January 2022. The prices of essential commodities have stabilized, and some have even started dropping.

With loans estimated at 12.7 billion euros, a third of which is due to Chinese creditors, the country had become last year the first in Africa to have defaulted on its debt since the beginning of the Covid-19 pandemic, due to the lack of agreements between previous governments and creditors.

But after a few months in power and intense negotiations, the Zambian president obtained a promise of 1.24 billion euros in aid from the IMF in December 2021, a chance for the country, which has been strangled by a colossal debt, to get its head above water.

The deal with the IMF is key to Zambia’s economic recovery because both the Western and Chinese creditors have put it as a condition for debt restructuring. Zambia’s foreign debt is so excessive that without the IMF deal, the country will not have much access to international finance, and the economy will be doomed.

With President Hichilema on the wheels, the country appears to be more at peace with itself than it was before the elections. The tension in the country has drastically reduced. Zambia is slowly becoming more united, and there is relative peace and tranquility than before. One of the major reasons for this is the fact that President HH has shocked his critics due to his lack of vindictiveness towards his political rivals.

President HH’s belief in reporting to Zambians through regular direct communication using various media is a breath of fresh air. He realises that he is accountable to the Zambian people.

Hichilema, a businessman turned politician, swept to power on promises to revive the economy, root out graft and woo back scared investors to Africa’s second-biggest copper producer. That is exactly what he is doing

“It was never going to be easy”, he has constantly said. But Zambians can dare to dream again.

 

Source: https://www.africanleadershipmagazine.co.uk/president-hakainde-hichilema-making-zambians-dream-again/

Job Advertisement: Finance Manager Company Secretary- Krl.

Kabundi Resources Limited (KRL), is a wholly owned subsidiary of ZCCM Investments Holdings Plc, managing the manganese project in Serenje District, Central Province of Zambia. 
The Company invites applications from suitably qualified and experienced persons who are innovative, energetic and performance driven to fill the position of FINANCE MANAGER. The Finance Manager will also assume the role of COMPANY SECRETARY for KRL.
 
Applications together with copies of certificates and detailed curriculum vitae should reach the undersigned not later than Friday 4th February 2022.
 
A/ Chief Human Resource & Administration Officer
ZCCM Investments Holdings Plc
ZCCM IH Office Park, Alick Nkhata Road
P O Box 30040
LUSAKA
Alternatively, forward your application to jobs@zccmnew.wpenginepowered.com

Please refer to the job description below for detailed information about the position.

Download full document here

ZAMBIA HAS MORE THAN COPPER, AND OFFERS UNEXPLORED POTENTIAL

With billions of dollars worth of African gas, gold, copper and cobalt to hit the markets in 2022, industry players are focused on the next big deals. The election of a new government in Zambia in August 2021 has led to optimism that the country is the stand-out player in African minerals exploration for 2022.

“All eyes are on Zambia,” says Peter Major, director of mining at Mergence Corporate Solutions in South Africa. Major spoke in Cape Town in October as he prepared for a mining investment trip to Zambia. In the new president, Hakainde Hichilema, he says, the country has “a real businessman” in charge.

As well as copper, whose industrial mining in Zambia dates back to the 1930s, the country has significant potential in gold, manganese, emeralds and coal, Major says. There has been a historic lack of exploration since the post-independence nationalisation of the mines, he says. Over the past five years, in particular, there has been “no motivation to prospect”.

A working cadastral system gives Zambia a crucial advantage over Ghana and the Democratic Republic of Congo, Major points out. But the question mark over the Hichilema administration is how it will handle its review of existing mining licences. “We need to see some people coming out of the other side of the pipeline,” Major says. Once that starts happening, he predicts, there will be a “stampede” to explore and mine in Zambia.

According to Irmgard Erasmus, a senior financial economist at Oxford Economics in Cape Town, Hichilema and his minister of mines, Paul Kabuswe, are likely to take a “more pragmatic, market-orientated approach” in dealing with mining companies, in contrast to the “hard-handed and interventionist stance” under the former president, Edgar Lungu. The Zambia Chamber of Mines has welcomed plans to reform the tax code, saying this will mark a break from the old “cash-grab mentality”.

Strike while the copper is hot

Mining was the only sector of the Zambian economy to decline in the second quarter of 2021, when copper production dropped 9%, hurt by the impact of Covid-19 and the first-quarter rainy season. This meant the country was unable to fully capitalise on the high copper prices, which peaked in May, according to economist Yvonne Mhango at Renaissance Capital.

Erasmus predicts that copper prices going forward will see a moderate but sustained decline, amplified by monetary policy normalisation in the US and the risk of a Chinese slowdown driven by stresses in the country’s property sector. These headwinds, Erasmus argues, will ensure that Hichilema will remain “mindful of the urgency to strengthen copper output”.

Major contrasts the Zambian outlook with that in South Africa. He is critical of President Cyril Ramaphosa’s cautious approach. Hichilema has shown a willingness to purge figures associated with the old regime, Major says: “Purging is necessary. But Ramaphosa does not purge. He promotes. South Africa needs a radical change in governance. Zambia is showing South Africa the way.”

Ghana overtook South Africa as the continent’s largest gold producer in 2019. Major sees little chance of that being reversed. Ghana’s government “acknowledges the problems and takes steps to help the industry,” Major says, citing its efforts to keep AngloGold Ashanti in the country.

In 2016, AngloGold’s head of corporate affairs, John Owusu, was killed during a riot by artisanal miners at the company’s Obuasi mine, but AngloGold has stuck with the project. “There is not more gold in Ghana than in South Africa, but there is a better legal framework,” Major says.

Ghana is scored 69 out of 100 in a 2021 ranking from the Natural Resource Governance Institute (NGRI) – an improvement of 13 points since 2017. Governance of taxation has improved, mostly due to the power of the Ghana Revenue Authority to audit all businesses, including mining companies. On adherence to environmental and social impacts, Ghana scored a maximum 100 on the NGRI index, with all gold-­mining companies now disclosing environmental and social impact assessments and environmental mitigation plans for new projects.

Refining for mining

National budgeting governance has improved due to the adoption of, and adherence to, fiscal rules, the NGRI says. Still, the report claims the extractives sector is being held back by a lack of online data portals, and weak adherence to open data standards. The government currently has no policy in place to publicly disclose mining sector contracts, though there are mandatory contract disclosures in the oil and gas sector.

Sulemanu Koney, CEO of the Ghana Chamber of Mines, is confident that Ghana’s mining sector can drive the country’s industrial development. For that, he argues, Ghana needs to move up the value chain and start to refine its raw materials. He wants to end the use of imported rubber for mining components and is in discussions with a multinational company to refine Ghanaian rubber.

“Extractive industries can’t be a silo or an enclave,” says Koney, a chemical engineer by training. “Deliberate thinking is needed to link themes up.” An example, Koney says, is the extraction of caustic soda from brine, which is used by the mining industry as well as in aluminium production and in detergents.

Mozambique’s progress

Ghana, Koney argues, needs a “minerals-based industrialisation strategy”. The challenge, he says, is to “leverage the presence of the mining industry for the good of the country” by promoting training and investment in technology. “That’s my raison d’être. Otherwise I would have given up a long time ago.”

The US is trying desperately not to buy rare earth from China.

In Mozambique, the coming year will be crucial in consolidating progress against the radical Islamic insurgency in the north of the country, which has delayed plans to develop the region’s natural gas resources. Progress in combating the insurgency means that “sentiment has changed quite drastically” for the better in recent months, says Hermano Juvane, head of oil, gas and value-­chain banking at Absa Bank in  Mozambique.

Support for Mozambique’s army, including from Rwanda and the Southern African Development Community, has contributed to the improvement, Juvane says. People have been able to return home to Palma in the northern Cabo  Delgado province.

TotalEnergies in September announced a two-year delay to the first onshore production of liquefied natural gas in Mozambique, with the first output now scheduled for 2026. TotalEnergies declared force majeure at its $15bn project in April, but project activity is now expected to restart in 2022. Juvane sees the new timetable as realistic. “There is about four years of work left,” he says.

Absa in Mozambique is focusing on financing subcontractors of the extractive industries, Juvane says. He sees opportunities for Mozambique in heavy sands, titanium, coal, lithium, graphite, aluminium and rubies.

Extracting the rare earth minerals, a set of 17 metallic elements used for high-tech applications such as cell phones, computer hard drives and electric vehicles, maybe an African industry of the future. China dominates the global supply of rare earths with an estimated share of 85%-90%, but Covid-19 and US-China tensions have sharpened the need for the world to find non-Chinese sources.

A rare-earth opportunity

“The US is trying desperately not to buy rare earth from China,” Simon Gardner-Bond, chief technical officer at Dublin-based TechMet, told a briefing in October. “The whole world is becoming increasingly nervous about China controlling the supply chain.”

TechMet invests in projects to develop critical metals for the transition to renewable energy and counts Rainbow Rare Earths among its investments. Rainbow, which is listed on London’s alternative investment market AIM, holds Africa’s only working rare earths mine at Gakara in Burundi.

But Burundi’s government in April halted production because it wants to renegotiate the mining convention, and meetings between Rainbow CEO George Bennett and President Évariste Ndayishimiye have so far not resolved the issue.

Rainbow is also planning to produce rare earths from gypsum stacks generated by hard-rock phosphate mining near Phalaborwa in South Africa’s Limpopo province and is exploring the economic viability of possible rare-earth deposits in northern Zimbabwe. Bennett is still confident agreement with Burundi can be reached. “There will be some give and take,” he says. “We will come up with a win-win solution.”

 

Source: https://www.theafricareport.com/168452/zambia-has-more-than-copper-and-offers-unexplored-potential/

NOTICE OF BEST EVALUATED BIDDER

Tender for the Provision of Common Leasehold Certificates of Title Deeds for ZCCM-IH Property Assets in Lusaka, Kabwe and Chililabombwe

 

The Bidders named below have been evaluated as the best bidders for the procurement requirements detailed below. In accordance with the requirement of clause 121 of the Public Procurement Regulations, 2011, it is the intention of ZCCM-IH, the procuring entity, to award contracts to the bidders named after ten (10) working days from the display given below.

 

Procurement Reference     Number ZCCM-IH/127/2021
Procurement   Description Provision of Common Leasehold Certificates of Title Deeds for ZCCM-IH Property Assets in Lusaka, Kabwe and Chililabombwe
Method of Procurement

 

Open National Bidding
Name and Address of Best Evaluated Bidder Noel Muleya Investments Limited & Wamuba Construction Limited, 3A Indeco Flats, Jambo Drive, Parklands, P.O. Box 23163, Kitwe
Proposed Contract Prices ZMW 1,489,627.20, Inclusive of VAT and Withholding Tax
Date of Display

 

20th January 2022
Date of      Removal

 

3rd February 2022

The display of this notice does not constitute an award of contract to the selected Bidders.  

Bid acceptance and contract placement shall be in accordance with the Public Procurement Regulations. Bidders have the right to appeal in accordance with the Public Procurement Regulations, 2011 within ten (10) working days from the date of publication of this notice.

 

Read the full document here: Notice of Best Evaluated Bidder – Provision of Common Leasehold Certificates of Title Deeds for ZCCM-IH Property Assets in Lusaka Kabwe and Chililabombwe – Januar (002)

NOTICE OF BEST EVALUATED BIDDER

The Bidder named below has been evaluated as the best evaluated bidder for the procurement requirements detailed below. In accordance with the requirement of clause 121 of the Public Procurement Regulations, 2011, it is the intention of ZCCM Investments Holdings Plc (ZCCM-IH), the procuring entity, to award the contracts to the bidder named after ten (10) working days from the display given below.

 

Table 1.

Procurement Reference     Number ZCCM-IH/016/2021
Procurement Description Design, Print, Supply and Delivery of Various ZCCM-IH Branded Collaterals
Method of Procurement Open National Bidding
Names and Addresses of Best Evaluated Bidders Lot 1& 2. Retro International Zambia Limited, Plot No. 6282 Mapepe Road, Lusaka, Zambia.

Lot 2. Central Clothing Factory Limited, Plot No. 12627, Chinika Industrial Area, P.O. Box 30522, Lusaka Zambia.

Proposed Contract Prices Lot 1- ZMW360,760.00 VAT Inclusive, with a Delivery Period of; Three (03) weeks from Contract Date

Lot 2- ZMW251,975.00 VAT Inclusive, with a Delivery Period of; Three (03) weeks from Contract Date 

Date of Display 20th January 2022
Date of Removal 3rd February 2022

The display of this notice does not constitute an award of contract to the Bidders mentioned above.

Bid acceptance and contract placement shall be in accordance with the Public Procurement Regulations. Bidders have the right to appeal, in accordance with the Public Procurement Regulations, 2011, within ten (10) working days from the date of publication of this notice.

 

Read the full document here: Notice of Best Evaluated Bidder for Design Print Supply and Delivery of Various ZCCM-IH Branded Collaterals (1)

NEW ZCCM-IH CHAIR SETS INVESTMENT AGENDA

NEWLY appointed ZCCM- Investment Holding (ZCCM-IH) board chairperson Dolika Banda (left) says she will ensure that the institution’s agenda on investment remains top priority in creating and maximising economic transformation across the mining value chain.
She said this in her new year message to ZCCM-IH shareholders posted by the Lusaka Securities Exchange Commission(LuSE) yesterday.

 

Source: https://www.times.co.zm/?p=114120

DOLIKA ASCENDS TO THE ZCCM IH BOARD CHAIRPERSONSHIP

Towards the end of Q4 2021, Zambia’s investment house announced the appointment of seasoned Banker and Investment Professional Dolika Banda as its new Board Chairperson, according to statement from ZCCM IH.

Lady Dolika Banda ZCCM IH’s First Woman Board Chair
In a statement issued by the Head of Corporate Affairs Loisa Mbatha on 15th December 2021, ZCCM-IH’s new Board Chair is an investment and financial with a wealth of over 36 years of experience from various local and international organisations across the globe.

“Over a 36-year career, she has held senior positions with Citibank Zambia, Barclays Bank Zambia, the World Bank Group’s International Finance Corporation (IFC), the UK government’s development finance institution (CDC Group Plc) and the African Union’s African Risk Capacity Insurance Company (ARC Ltd)”, read the issued statement. “With a focus on banking and finance, her international experience combines operational investments as well as policy advice. She has worked across the globe, including Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, Europe, Central Asia and the United States of America”.

Lady Dolika ascends to one of the most influential boards whose impact extends over a mining sector in transition. With souring copper prices and a need for a firm position regarding the way forward on two mines in her company’s portfolio (Konkola Copper Mine and Mopani Copper Mine), Dolika’s board will be making the decisions that will shape the destiny of the mining competitive landscape in Zambia.

According to an article published by Bloomberg on 29th October 2021, “Mining royalties will be deductible from income taxes, Finance Minister Situmbeko Musokotwane told lawmakers Friday in his first budget speech since his party won power in August elections. However, the Minister didn’t announce changes to the royalty rates. In 2019, the nation implemented the 10th change to the tax regime in 16 years”.

Lady Dolika’s Board will have comfort in a fiscal regime that is on record and poised to bring stability in a sector desperate for predictability due the capital-intensive nature of the industry.

In a statement issued by Head of Corporate Affairs at ZCCM IH Loisa Mbatha issued on 15th December 2021, commenting on her appointment, Ms. Banda said “she was honoured to be awarded an opportunity to serve the country through this position. she did not underestimate the challenges that lie ahead – yet therein lies the opportunity. Working together for a common goal, as I know we will do, I see a ZCCM-IH that will fly high, just as the eagle on our flag soars against all odds”.

All the members of the Dolika led board has been fully constituted with eight-members including Directors representing NAPSA, the minority shareholders and the IDC. “Ms. Banda has assured ZCCM-IH shareholders that she will endeavour to lead the Board such that the decisions will always be in the best interest of the Company. She further states that despite the many challenges faced by the Company in the past “there is now a wave of a positive confluence of key influencing factors such as political goodwill, coupled with international confidence, shareholder optimism and patience, and positive demographic dynamics” to spur the Company to growth”.

 

Source: https://fizambia.com/dolika-ascends-to-the-zccm-ih-board-chairpersonship/