‘King coal is back’, says MantasheThe Minister of Mineral Resources and Energy, Gwede Mantashe addressing members of the media at the release of the mine health and safety statistics for the 2019 calendar year held at Tshedimosetso House, Hatfield in Pretoria. 24/01/2020

Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 07 February 2026
📘 Source: Mail & Guardian

Mineral and petroleum resources ministerGwede Mantashedeclared on Thursday that “King Coal is back”, insisting that the fossil fuel remains indispensable to both South Africa’s economy and the global energy landscape. Delivering the keynote address at the21st Annual Southern African Coal Conferencein Cape Town, the minister framed coal, not as a relic of the past, but as a critical driver of energy security, industrial activity and employment. “Despite its long history, coal continues to play a critical role in our economy.

It is fundamental to addressing energy poverty across Africa and remains indispensable in securing reliable baseload energy for the world,” he said. Coal powers roughly 80% of South Africa’s electricity generation and sustains about90 000 mineworkers and their families, Mantashe said, noting how the sector faces growing pressure from environmental groupings and global decarbonisation trends, with some predicting its imminent decline. “Reality, however, tells a different story,” the minister said, citing the International Energy Agency’s 2025 Global Energy Review, which showed global coal demand grew by 1.2% in 2024.

This, he asserted, demonstrated quite clearly that “King Coal is back”. Mantashe pointed to new coal-fired power projects in China, India, Japan and South Africa, alongside investments in carbon capture, utilisation, storage and use (CCUS) technologies, which will “extend the role of coal well beyond what many anticipate.” South Africa itself is investing in CCUS, including projects in Leandra, Mpumalanga, to “ensure that we responsibly extend the life of our coal industry while utilising the resources Recent domestic investments, such as Ikoti Coal’s underground operations, Seriti’s Naudesbank Colliery and Arnot OpCo’s open-cast operations, underscore the sector’s ongoing economic significance. “Our own studies confirm that coal will remain integral to South Africa’s economy as the primary source of our energy generation for many years to come.” Mantashe also highlighted coal’s untapped potential beyond energy.

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The coal value chain generates vast quantities of coal discards and coal fly ash. South Africa alone produces more than 25 million tonnes of coal fly ash annually, yet less than 10% is beneficiated. “The remainder is stored in ash dumps, representing both a long standing environmental liability and a significant unrealised resource.” Containing rare earth elements, vanadium, alumina and other critical minerals, these coal by-products could fuel battery, electronics and advanced manufacturing industries.

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Originally published by Mail & Guardian • February 07, 2026

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