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Zimbabwe's Post Covid-19 Lockdown Mining Plan

Author: Exports News
Jul 23, 2020
2 min read
1997
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1997
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Jul 23, 2020
2 min read
Zimbabwe's Post Covid-19 Lockdown Mining Plan

Mining is a crucial industry in Zimbabwe. It provides foreign receipts, formal employment, and tax revenue, all of which are in short supply.

In 2019, mining provided US$2.9 billion or 55% of total export earnings. So when a lockdown was announced on March 30 in response to the Covid-19, the mining sector was affected. Mines are particularly risky because:

  1. They operate from remote areas with access to limited health resources that can stave off a pandemic.
  2. Miners are usually confined and congested in closed spaces with inadequate ventilation. Additionally, miners share tools, machinery along with living, and eating areas. This makes social distancing difficult and increases the risks of transmission.
  3. The mining workforce is usually transitory and highly mobile. They can come from remote villages or other towns. They could easily carry the virus to their communities.
  4. The work that miners do under harsh conditions and with harmful chemicals compromises their respiratory system. This makes them a vulnerable group to their virus.

Exports News

After the initial three-week lockdown, mining and tobacco industries were allowed to begin operations while the rest of the nation faced another two weeks of lockdown. Mines were allowed to open if they could screen their workers and let them stay at their workplace during the extended lockdown period.

The measures to stave of the virus can be monitored and enforced more easily on large mines. It's the small scale miners that would be challenging. Small scale miners produce more than half of mineral production in Zimbabwe. The sheer number of participants, remote locations, harsh working conditions, and low operating margins will make investing in protective gear along with adopting health protocols difficult.

Whether the mining industry will survive, the Covid-19 pandemic is uncertain. Before the lockdown, large miners like Zimasco, Portnex, and African Chrome Fields (ACF) were struggling. The world economy is expected to shrink in 2020, so there could be a fall in mineral prices. Zimbabwean miners and the government may have to wade through these low prices while trying to keep production levels stable without an infection incident. Achieving this will prove complicated.

Stay tuned on this developing story with Exports News.

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