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SA miners to bid for manganese export terminal concession

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A consortium of South African (SA) manganese miners will bid to build and operate a new export port for the mineral at Ngqura ​in Eastern Cape Province, African Rainbow Minerals (ARM) said on Friday.
ARM, ‌whose unit Assmang is a member of the Manganese Producers Consortium (MPC), said private companies were keen to partner with state-owned Transnet on the project, which is expected to add 16 ​million metric tons of manganese export capacity and improve logistics.
“The ​MPC intends to bid for the request for quotation ⁠with Transnet as a joint-venture partner for the design, build, construction ​and operator of the new manganese ore export port at Ngqura, ​namely the Ngqura Manganese Ore Export Terminal,” ARM said in a results statement.
Transnet has said it will invite bids for the Ngqura manganese export terminal around ​April.
The freight rail and port operator is opening parts of its ​network to private firms to help restore capacity that has slumped in recent years, throttling mineral exports.
SA ⁠holds about 70% of the world’s manganese resources and is the top producer of the mineral, which is mainly used in steelmaking. Exports go mostly to China, the world’s biggest steelmaker.
The African country is estimated to have ​exported about 26.2 ​million tons ⁠of manganese in 2025, a record, after the previous peak of 22.3 million tons in 2024, according ​to the Minerals Council.
ARM’s manganese ore operations reported a ​76% ⁠decline in headline earnings, hit by a 22% drop in the average Dollar price for high-grade ore.
The diversified miner’s profit rose 10% to $100.81 ⁠million ​in the six months to December 31, ​as higher platinum group metal prices offset lower income from manganese, iron ore and its loss-making ​coal division.
–Reuters–