Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Mining production increases slightly in the first quarter

Date:

South Africa’s Mining Production Returns to Growth in Q1 2026

According to data released by Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) on Thursday, the country’s mining output rose 0.6 % in the first quarter of 2026 compared with the fourth quarter of 2025. This modest rebound follows a 0.5 % month‑on‑month decline in Q4 2025 and marks the first quarterly increase since mid‑2025.

The mining sector, which contributes roughly 6 % of South Africa’s nominal GDP, is therefore providing a slight uplift to overall economic growth expectations for the early part of the year.

Key Drivers Behind the Uptick

Two commodities accounted for the bulk of the gain:

  • Platinum group metals (PGM) – production climbed 8.5 %, adding 2.3 percentage points to overall mining growth.
  • Gold – output increased 8.2 %, contributing another 0.7 percentage points.

Both metals benefited from strong price environments:

  • Gold prices rose about 65 % throughout 2025 and added a further 8 % in Q1 2026, driven by safe‑haven demand amid geopolitical tension and new US tariffs.
  • PGM prices surged more than 130 % in 2025 after years of subdued demand; tariff uncertainty and tightening South African supply created notable market deficits.

Challenges Offset Some Gains

While precious metals shone, other major commodities dragged down the headline figure:

  • Iron ore production fell 6.6 %.
  • Coal output declined 3.4 %.

The combined drag from these sectors reduced the net quarterly increase to the reported 0.6 %. Analysts note that the volatility in bulk commodities reflects ongoing global demand softening and logistical constraints at key export terminals.

Implications for the Broader Economy

The mining sector’s revenue performance reinforces its fiscal importance:

  • Tax revenues from mining jumped 29 % in 2025, providing a valuable boost to the national exchequer.
  • Mining sector revenue at current prices rose 6.6 % in Q1 2026 versus Q4 2025.
  • In March alone, sales surged 30 %, with PGMs contributing 21 percentage points, gold 8.2 points, and chrome ore 2.9 points.

These figures suggest that, despite headwinds in bulk commodities, the precious‑metals segment can still underpin government finances and support broader economic activity through wages, procurement, and downstream industries.

Looking Ahead

Industry observers caution that the current growth rate remains well below the robust expansions seen earlier in 2025—2.7 % in Q3 and nearly 4 % in Q2. Sustained improvement will likely depend on:

  • Stabilising global demand for iron ore and coal, particularly from China and India.
  • Continued strength in precious‑metals prices, which remains tied to macro‑economic risk sentiment and monetary‑policy outlook.
  • Infrastructure upgrades at ports and rail corridors to alleviate export bottlenecks.

Stats SA’s regular quarterly releases, combined with market analyses from reputable sources such as Bloomberg, Reuters, and the Chamber of Mines of South Africa, will be essential for tracking whether the modest Q1 2026 gain can evolve into a more durable recovery.

Data sources: Statistics South Africa (Stats SA) mining production release, dated [insert date]; commodity price trends from Bloomberg and Reuters; fiscal impact estimates from the South African National Treasury.

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