Role of Mining and Coal in Future Economic Developments
Download
Report
Transcript Role of Mining and Coal in Future Economic Developments
Thabelo Nemaorani
April, 2013
Economic Background
Upper-middle income economy, GDP/cap around
$7500 – among the highest in SSA
Long period of rapid growth since independence in
1966
Diamond mining historical the largest economic
sector – around 30% of GDP
A dominant role for government in the economy –
largely financed by mineral revenues
Economic Growth - 5year averages
GDP Growth
Sluggish growth
Total GDP grew by
3.7% in 2012,
slowing down from
6.1% in 2011
NMPS recorded
growth of 7.5% in
2012 (9.7% in 2011)
Mining output
contracted by 8.1%
in 2012 (-2.4% in
2011)
Sources of growth 2003-2012
(economy diversified?)
International Trade
Share of Exports in 2012
(Need for Export Diversification?)
Meat Soda Ash
1%
2%
Rough
Diamonds
61%
Gold Textiles
2%
1%
Vehicles and
parts
2%
Machinery &
electrical eq.
3%
Other
manufactures
5%
Copper-nickel
9%
Polished
Diamonds
14%
Exports, Imports & Trade Balance
Both imports and
exports have
growth steadily
since early 2009
Imports driven by
higher fuel prices
Exports spiked in
2012 H2 due to
recovery in
diamonds, but have
since fallen back
Perpetual trade
deficit
Fiscal Position
Sources of Government Revenue
SACU largest
share (34%) in
2012/13, first time
since 1970’s
Mineral’s share
declining
Fell from 48% in
2006/07 to 29%
in 2012/13
Employment
Formal Employment levels
Most recent data-June
2011
Total of 335,156 jobs
Formal employment
growth slow – 1.5% in
year to June 2011
Job creation
insufficient:
4,828 new jobs in
12 months
Approx 15-20,000
new jobs needed
each year
Official
unemployment rate
(2009/10) 17.8%
Share of formal employment –
June 2011
335 156 jobs in to
formal
employment
Relative to GDP
shares, govt has
high employment,
while mining
share is low
Mining share 4 %
(11,688)
Botswana faces challenges of;
Undiversified exports
Fiscal dependency on Mineral revenues
High unemployment
Is Coal the answer to Botswana’s
Challenges?
Coal Economic opportunities
Coal mining- large
reserves ( estimated 212
billion tonnes)
Coal exports (India and
China is potential
markets)
Electricity generation
for domestic use and
export
Coal exports need
dedicated railway line
and Port
Faced with 3 Options:
Through Zimbabwe to
Mozambique in East
(complex)
Trans-Kalahari through
Namibia (simpler)
Through South Africa’s
(Waterberg area) and use
existing infrastructure
(limited capacity)
Projected Mineral Exports (real)
Coal exports
projected to grow
steadily till they
plateau at P 15.9 bn
in 2024
At peak of Mineral
export in 2025, coal’s
share is 23%
(diamond’s share is
60%)
Coal becomes
increasingly
important as
Diamond export
deteriorates
However, coal cant
replace diamond
exports
Projected Real Govt Revenues from
Mining
Mineral Govt
revenues to
increase until they
plateau at around
P26 bn
Remains fairly
stable from 2017
until 2026
The decline
brought upon by
fall in Diamond
sector
Projected Employment levels
Coals
contribution to
employment low
Coal employment
to peak in 2024
(6,759 )
At peak, only
accounts for 2%
of total
employment &
35% of
employment in
mining
Barriers /challenges
Narrow window of opportunity
Increased efforts to reduce Green House Gas emissions
Renewable energy (solar and wind) getting cheaper
High risk
High investment on uncertain future
No real alternative use of infrastructure
Coal can’t fully replace diamonds as source of Govt
revenues
Relative profitability (coal much less profitable to mine than
diamonds)
Tax rates (lower on coal compared to diamonds)
Diamonds Vs Coal
Diamonds
Coal
Profit
rate
80%
30%
Tax rate
80%
30%
Govt
revenue
64%
9%
If you replace a BWP 1 bn
worth of Diamonds with
a BWP 1 bn worth of
Coal, Govt stands to
make less
Diamond have a higher
profit margin and taxed
more than Coal.
Conclusion
Coal alone can’t replace Diamonds, especially with
respect to:
Exports
Government Revenue
But it can make a significant contribution – along with
other activities – to economic diversification
Need for swift action on providing the necessary
infrastructure
Railway line (West or East)
Dedicated Port
Thabelo Nemaorani
[email protected]