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China's Wesizwe South African Platinum project will cut 70% of its workforce

Wesizwe Platinum announced on Thursday that it would lay off almost 500 workers or around 70% of its workforce at its Bakubung mine, South Africa. The company is transferring from a phased development to a one-stage ramp up.

New platinum projects, like Bakubung? are becoming rarer. South Africa is responsible for 70% of global supplies of the metal that's used to make autocatalysts which reduce vehicle emissions.

The industry is hesitant to expand production because it faces a long-term challenge from electric cars, which don't require autocatalysts.

The Chinese-backed Wesizwe has abandoned its original plan to ramp up Bakubung in phases. The Chinese-backed?Wesizwe has abandoned its original plan for a phased ramp-up of Bakubung that would?have started with 1 million metric tons per year.

Wesizwe announced in a press release that the?project?, which?has been in development for 15 years?, will follow a one-stage ramp up to 3.5 millions tons per annum.

The company stated that "this revised strategy will require a reduction in employees to achieve and maintain the production profile envisaged in the updated Business Plan."

The company added that the proposed restructuring would affect 497 employees at various levels and disciplines across the business.

Wesizwe's anchor shareholder, China-Africa Jinchuan Investment said that maintaining the current "headcount" of 706 employees was not sustainable.

The 'Bakubung Platinum Project' is behind schedule in its production due to a number of factors, including funding delays, COVID-19 disruptions, labour unrest and community protests, as well as a cyber attack.

Wesizwe didn't give a date for the production of the project under the new plan. (Reporting and editing by Joe Bavier; Nelson Banya)

(source: Reuters)