Zimbabwe News Update

🇿🇼 Published: 16 February 2026
📘 Source: Club of Mozambique

Australian diversified miner South32 reaffirmed it would put its Mozambique aluminium plant on care and maintenance next month after a drought hit power supply, as it posted a higher first-half profit that beat analysts’ estimates on Thursday. The announcement came days after Mozambique’s Energy Minister Estevao Pale said “the government is doing everything that is required to make sure that the (Mozal) plant doesn’t go into maintenance.” READ:Mozambique: Govt trying to keep largest industry going one month before shutdown Just in: Mozambique pushing to keep South32’s Mozal aluminium smelter open, minister says – Reuters South32 last year took a $372 million impairment on the business because it had not been able to secure affordable power after March 2026, given the drought’s impact on Mozambique’s hydroelectric power utility. A reasonably priced deal with back-up provider Eskom, a South African utility, could not be reached.

“Unfortunately … the reality is we’re running out of things in the next week or so, of pitch and coke, and even if we found a power contract today, that could not be delivered to us in time to keep the plant running. So we’re definitely heading for care and maintenance,” South32’s outgoing CEO Graham Kerr said on an earnings call. In Mozambique, the miner employs 2,000-plus people directly, another 2,000 contractors, and the plant accounts for a third of the country’s manufacturing jobs, he said.

READ:COSATU raises alarm over potential closure of Mozal, threatens 27,200 jobs in South Africa and Mozambique Alumina that would have been used by the smelter will likely be routed to the Middle East, Kerr added. Elsewhere, higher commodity prices overall helped to boost South32’s underlying earnings to $435 million for the half-year ended December 31, beating the Visible Alpha consensus estimate of $386.6 million and higher than the $375 million a year earlier. Shares rallied as much as 5%.

📖 Continue Reading
This is a preview of the full article. To read the complete story, click the button below.

Read Full Article on Club of Mozambique

AllZimNews aggregates content from various trusted sources to keep you informed.

[paywall]

The first-half earnings gains were driven broadly by higher commodity prices, notably copper, silver and aluminium, lower controllable costs, and the restart of operations at its manganese division in Australia, the world’s biggest producer of manganese said. Its manganese division in Australia swung to a profit with underlying earnings before interest and taxes of $66 million, up from a loss of $34 million from a year earlier, as the segment normalised production rates following the impacts of Tropical Cyclone Megan.

[/paywall]

📰 Article Attribution
Originally published by Club of Mozambique • February 16, 2026

Powered by
AllZimNews

All Zim News – Bringing you the latest news and updates.

By Hope