Glencore pays $1.3bn to SA government in 2019
Diversified miner Glencore made payments of $7.7-billion to
the governments of countries in which it operates in 2019.
This includes $96.6-million paid to the South African
government in taxes, royalties and other payments.
It paid Argentina $21.6-million, Australia $1.6-billion,
Bolivia $10.9-million, Cameroon $5.3-million, Canada $51.4-million, Chad
$88.6-million, Chile $235.6-million, Colombia $291.7-million, the Democratic
Republic of Congo $614-million, Equatorial Guinea $65.9-million, Kazakhstan
$414.2-million, Peru $417.1-million and Zambia $11.6-million.
Thirty per cent of these payment contributions went towards
adjusted effective tax rates, while $5.2-billion was paid in salaries, wages,
social security and other benefits. Glencore also invested $9.1-million in
infrastructure such as public roads, sewage and power networks and water
processing and distribution.
The miner also spent $90-million on initiatives to support
local community development.
Glencore CFO Steve Kalmin says that being active at multiple
stages of the commodity supply chain enables the group to deliver significant
and sustainable economic benefits to its host governments, employees, suppliers
and communities.
“The activities of resource companies and the payments we
make support governments to realise value from their natural resources.
Governments can use the taxes and royalties that we pay to fund public services
and infrastructure to improve their nation’s quality of life.”
He adds that, during 2019, Glencore’s total payments to
government, including those relating to its ownership interest in the Antamina,
Cerrejón and Collahuasi joint ventures, were around $7.7-billion, of which
$4-billion is reported pursuant to the European Union (EU) Accounting Directive
extractive industries’ reporting requirements. This compares with a 2018 total
of $5.7-billion and $3.7-billion under the EU reporting requirements.
SOUTH AFRICA
Glencore has, over the past ten years, invested $7.2-billion
to acquire and develop its assets in South Africa.
In South Africa, the miner spent $377-million on capital
expenditure, making a total payment of $1.3-billion to government and paying 19
400 employees and contractors in 2019.
Glencore Coal has also rolled out a free WiFi initiative to
a number of communities in the Mpumalanga province. The initiative includes 15
hotspots that enable access for up to 250 users with each user receiving 500
Mb/d of data. The majority of the users are between 18 and 34 years of age and
are either students or unemployed people seeking work.
The initiative addresses a number of the
community-identified concerns, including local procurement through facilitating
access to Glencore Coal’s enterprise and supplier development portal, local
employment through promoting online job opportunities and improving public
health through making information on health programmes more readily available.
In Mpumalanga, Glencore’s Lydenburg smelter worked in
partnership with the Department of Public Works and Ehlanzeni College to expand
the college’s footprint to Mashishing.
The miner notes that the new vocational education and
training college has already transformed the skills and career prospects of
young people across the district. It offers easy, affordable access to tertiary
education for parents who cannot afford to send their children to study outside
Mashishing.
The college also provides skills required by local
industries, ensuring graduates have relevant qualifications and stand a good
chance of finding jobs or opportunities to start small businesses.
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