- Perspective – December 2021
- Advert : Columbus Stainless
- Industry Insight
- Strategic Review
- Market Intelligence
- Women in Stainless Steel – SASSDA BOOSTS FEMALE PARTICIPATION IN THE STAINLESS STEEL ECONOMY“Women are the largest untapped reservoir of talent in the world” – Hillary Clinton The world is entering a new era of female empowerment. Where women are at the helm; they are the ‘captains of industry’, the moguls, industrialists and tycoons. In line with this, government has plans to roll out a National Strategic Plan, consisting of six pillars of which one, aims to ensure women’s economic and financial inclusion as part of a broader localisation drive. This will fuel a critically needed agenda that paves the way towards gender equality, poverty eradication, sustainability and inclusive economic growth. President Ramaphosa has said “We are going to drive women’s economic inclusion through public procurement. We have set the target of ensuring that 40% of goods and services procured by public entities are procured from women-owned business”. A Women’s Economic Assembly (WECONA) has therefore been created with the focus on finding “supply chain opportunities for women-owned businesses in key industries such as steel, automotive and energy sectors”, stated President Ramaphosa. COLLABORATING FOR SUSTAINABLE SOLUTIONS As a result, Sassda has been working with government to find opportunities for female-led companies within their membership and contribute…
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- Sector Focus – LOCALISATION HAS POTENTIAL FOR FAR REACHING BENEFITSThe South African Stainless Steel Development Association (Sassda) is playing a vital role in developing downstream opportunities for the local holloware sector as part of its key stakeholder representation role in the development of the government’s Steel Master Plan. The plan has seen the dtic focusing on developing opportunities for stainless steel, and prioritising the localisation of products. This has been wrought with challenges in sourcing products from abroad, thereby increasing the need for localising the manufacturing of stainless steel products. Sassda Market Intelligence specialist Lesley Squires reports; “When the Steel Master Plan was first released last year, the stainless steel subsector received recognition for its work and the potential it offers the steel industry. Sassda’s role in the plan is aligned with its mandate, to promote the growth of the local conversion of stainless steel to the benefit of our members, industry, and the country. “Although there are a substantial number of stainless steel consumer goods available in the market, it was decided to put our focus into specific product types initially, with a view to sourcing from local manufacturers and ascertaining if the local pricing was acceptable to the clients.” She said…
- Case Study : 3CR12 in Busses
- Case Study : 3CR12 – 3CR12 OFFERS NEW SOLUTIONS TO AGE-OLD APPLICATIONSEarly humans made a breakthrough when the making and controlling of fire was invented. This was critical, not only for security and warmth but also provided new ways of preparing food. Since then, cooking has developed into a global industry and, as we all know, stainless steel plays an inherent part in this industry. However, the original cooking style developed by early men is still very popular in the shape of what we know as a braai. Especially in South Africa where nearly every household has an area for fire making and cooking on coals or flame. We also find that virtually all participants in the art of braaiing have a design for the ultimate braai and finding the best design often leads to ‘heated’ arguments! A METAL THAT KEEPS ITS COOL WHEN HOT In the US there is also a trend towards portable camping braais and 4×4 enthusiasts in Texas seems to be very impressed by the latest South African braai export. This homegrown innovation is manufactured by a local entrepreneur and is made from another South African innovation, 3CR12 stainless steel. The product is designed to last a lifetime with a 100-year…
- Personality Profile – A LIFETIME OF DEDICATIONThe greatest strength of the South African stainless steel sector is undoubtedly its people, who believe in the material’s ability to enhance and sustain the South African economy no matter how onerous the challenges it faces. For this reason, our profile series focuses on stainless professionals who embody the entrepreneurial spirit and who will shape our industry for years to come. In this issue, we speak to Wire Products Stainless Steel Director Tanya Papadopoulos. What was your path to forging a career in the South African stainless steel sector? I have no formal post school degree. I started in this industry at the age of 21 and it was not long after that, my interest in this industry grew. With the help of my predecessors, I was trained in different fields throughout my years at the company. I have been with the company for over 30 years and it is with my experience, initiative and dedication that I have succeeded in my current position. I look at this as an advantage where experience is what comes down to understanding the industry. What attracts me about this industry is that there are continuous opportunities for growth and I …
- Advertorial : SAIW – SAIW CHAMPIONS TOP QUALITY WELDING SKILLS ACROSS THE CONTINENTThe Southern African Institute of Welding (SAIW) is a champion of the world class skills, quality levels and productivity output that are all key rivers of a sustainable economic growth plan. In light of this, it aims to develop its existing top quality training and increase South Africa’s welding, NDT, inspection (including certified inspectors, IPEs and CPs) and welding coordinator (including the International Welding Practitioner, Specialist and Technologist) skills base. In line with this, the SAIW is forging a path to boost welding skills across the African continent and has signed an SLA with The African Welding Federation (TWF) of which it is a founding member. Significant to the TWF and SAIW alliance, is a strong focus on ISO 3834 certification, which allows certification bodies to assess a manufacturer’s ability to meet customer and regulatory quality requirements in fusion welding in both workshops and in the field, and further endorses a company’s welding employees as competent. It also boosts a manufacturer’s ability to sell its products in domestic and international markets. This type of strategic partnership is a key part of the SAIW’s long terms growth plans with Executive Director John Tarboton…
- Africa Market Intelligence – $60-BILLION MOZAMBIQUE OIL & GAS PROJECT BACK IN BUSINESSMozambique presents an excellent opportunity for the local supply of stainless steel into various ventures that form part of the $60-Billion oil and gas projects. Unfortunately, the project was halted in the first half of 2021 due to Islamist militant insurgencies in the far north of the country, in the provinces where the gas projects were located… Mozambique’s gas and oil fields have long been touted as a fertile breeding ground for new business opportunities in the form of project participation for South Africa stainless steel manufacturers, distributors, and fabricators. The good news is that despite the stalling of this project due to insurgency attacks, Italian energy services group Saipem SPMI.MI has now said it expects a major LNG project in Mozambique to restart around mid-2022 after it was put on hold this year for safety reasons. This follows French energy Group Total declaring a force majeure on its $20 billion liquefied natural gas project in Mozambique Late in April 2021 following insurgent attacks. A LOOK BACK & CURRENT CONTEXT… In the first half of the second millennium A.D., northern Mozambican port towns were frequented by traders from Somalia, Ethiopia, Egypt, Arabia,…
$60-BILLION MOZAMBIQUE OIL & GAS PROJECT BACK IN BUSINESS
Mozambique presents an excellent opportunity for the local supply of stainless steel into various ventures that form part of the $60-Billion oil and gas projects. Unfortunately, the project was halted in the first half of 2021 due to Islamist militant insurgencies in the far north of the country, in the provinces where the gas projects were located…
Mozambique’s gas and oil fields have long been touted as a fertile breeding ground for new business opportunities in the form of project participation for South Africa stainless steel manufacturers, distributors, and fabricators.
The good news is that despite the stalling of this project due to insurgency attacks, Italian energy services group Saipem SPMI.MI has now said it expects a major LNG project in Mozambique to restart around mid-2022 after it was put on hold this year for safety reasons.
This follows French energy Group Total declaring a force majeure on its $20 billion liquefied natural gas project in Mozambique Late in April 2021following insurgent attacks.
A LOOK BACK & CURRENT CONTEXT…
In the first half of the second millennium A.D., northern Mozambican port towns were frequented by traders from Somalia, Ethiopia, Egypt, Arabia, Persia, and India. The Portuguese were able to wrestle much of the coastal trade from Arab Muslims.
Portugal did not relinquish control of Mozambique until 1975. Following that, large-scale emigration, economic dependence on South Africa, a severe drought, and a prolonged civil war hindered the country’s development until the mid-1990s.
The ruling Front for the Liberation of Mozambique (FRELIMO) party formally abandoned Marxism in 1989, and a new constitution the following year provided for multiparty elections and a free market economy.
An UN- negotiated peace agreement between FRELIMO and rebel Mozambique National Resistance (RENAMO) forces ended the fighting in 1992. In 2004, Mozambique underwent a delicate transition as Joaquim CHISSANO
stepped down after 18 years in office.
His elected successor, Armando GUEBUZA, served two terms and then passed executive power to Filipe NYUSI in 2015. RENAMO’s residual armed forces intermittently engaged in a low-level insurgency after 2012, but a late December 2016 ceasefire eventually led to the two sides signing a comprehensive peace deal in August 2019.
In October 2019, election results were challenged by Western observers and civil society as being problematic, resulting in resounding wins for NYUSI and FRELIMO across the country. Since October 2017, violent extremists - an official ISIS media outlet recognised as ISIS’s network in Mozambique for the first time in June 2019 - have been conducting attacks against civilians and security services in the northern province of Cabo Delgado.
PROJECT UPDATES
The front-end engineering design for the Beluluane Gas Company liquified natural gas import terminal project - being developed by Southern African energy group Gigajoule, French energy multinational Total Energies, and Mozambican natural gas distributor Matola Gas Company (MGC) is also complete, adding another key milestone to the project. Mozambique’s state owned gas company ENH, a shareholder in both MGC and Rompco - the gas pipeline that runs from Mozambique to the industrial heartland of South Africa - has a share in the project.
The project will meet the growing energy demand in both Mozambique and South Africa by utilising MGCs existing gas pipeline network that will be upgraded to increase its capacity to supply the full capacity of Rompco ensuring natural gas is available for industries and power generation projects.
Gigajoule CEO Jurie Swart explains that the Government of Mozambique awarded the LNG import concession to BGC and approved the construction of a new, 28-inch pipeline linking the terminal to the existing MGC transmission network two years ago, after years of pre-feasibility studies. The concession includes the operation of a permanently moored floating storage regasification unit (FSRU), marine infrastructure, and a new high-pressure gas pipeline.
The project is critical for energy security in the region. There is insufficient natural gas to meet the current demand for market growth and the power generation needs in Southern Africa, which is set to worsen as output from the Pande and Temane gas fields start to decline within the next three to five years. This shortage has been worsened by the urgent need to transition away from coal as a fuel source and to complement the volatility of renewables.
GAS INFRASTRUCTURE
The gas infrastructure will connect the FSRU to a new 2 000 MW gas-fired power plant in Matola, Mozambique, which is well situated on the Southern African grid and able to supply industries with cleaner, dispatchable power at a market competitive tariff.
The project includes an onshore LNG Truck Loading Facility (TLF) capable of supplying customers by road transport who are not situated close to the pipeline distribution network. Preliminary studies show that the TLF can compete with alternative fuels for gas transported up to 1 000 km from Matola.
A final investment decision is expected in mid-2022, depending on the level of off-take secured at that stage. The FEED has now been completed and approved; final environmental reports compiled; and all development processes, licenses, and approvals are on track, while commercial engagements with the market have already kicked off with first commitments signed,” remarks Swart.
Finally, he stresses that there has been no impact on the project as a result of the unrest in the north of Mozambique, explaining that the BGC terminal will be supplied from Total Energies’ global LNG portfolio, meaning that there will be no supply challenges once the LNG terminal is online.
The project to drill the six wells which will feed the Floating Liquefied Natural Gas Platform in Area 4, in the deep waters of the Rovuma Basin, Cabo Delgado, is in its final stages.
With liquefied natural gas (LNG) expected to grow exponentially over the next five years, owing to the global drive to greener power generation, diverse consulting service provider Synergy Oil & Gas Consulting & Training senior energy manager Ismaeel Fataar says now is the time to upskill workers to keep up with international skills and technological developments.
“South Africa currently relies heavily on Mozambique for the supply of LNG, but with training and the correct infrastructure developments in the sector, South Africa can attain supply independence.”
Using LNG, which is a clean, cost effective and readily available product, will help South Africa’s efforts at a just energy transition, he adds. However, Fataar mentions that the LNG industry is new and has no concrete standards and accreditations, which “needs to be reviewed.
(Sources: Reuters and Engineering News)