Glencore Faces Critical Deadline in South African Power Dispute
30.03.2026 - 09:07:19 | boerse-global.deA pivotal decision for commodities giant Glencore is due today, Monday, with the future of its South African ferrochrome operations hanging in the balance. The company is locked in tense negotiations with state-owned power utility Eskom over electricity tariffs. Failure to reach an agreement on a revised rescue plan for the industry could lead to the permanent closure of smelters and the loss of 2,500 jobs. These facilities have been idle since April 2025.
A Costly Discount
While Eskom has significantly reduced industrial power prices in two stages—slashing rates from 87.74 to 62 cents per kilowatt-hour—Glencore contends the attached conditions are commercially unviable. The utility’s demands in exchange for the discount include a profit-sharing mechanism tied to rising commodity prices, restrictions on dividend distributions, and an increase in the guaranteed power offtake from 70% to 80% of the contracted volume.
In response, Glencore has submitted a counter-proposal, which now requires mandatory approval from South Africa's National Energy Regulator (Nersa). The company has stated that without a compromise, it will proceed with the extensive job cuts. Notably, despite the prolonged operational halt, the workforce at the affected plants has continued to receive full pay, a situation the company says has generated substantial costs.
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Structural Crisis in a Key Sector
The protracted talks highlight a deep structural crisis. South Africa, despite holding an estimated 80% of global chrome reserves, has ceded its position as the leading ferrochrome producer to China. Soaring electricity costs are the primary driver of this shift, constituting up to 40% of production expenses. Power prices have skyrocketed by more than 900% since 2008. The severity of the situation is evident nationwide, where only 11 of 66 smelting furnaces are currently operational.
High Stakes Negotiations
The outcome carries significant risk for both parties. Eskom is heavily reliant on the return of major industrial customers. The restart of operations by Glencore and its competitor Samancor would guarantee the utility annual sales of 12.8 terawatt-hours. With a debt burden of 372 billion rand and massive municipal arrears, Eskom urgently needs these reliable industrial revenues to repair its own balance sheet.
For Glencore, missing today's deadline would have long-term consequences. Beyond the final shutdown of the affected smelters, the company risks a permanent loss of market share as customers are forced to establish alternative supply chains. A negative ruling from Nersa would likely result in a sustained downsizing of Glencore's South African ferrochrome division and reshape the global supply structure in favor of Chinese producers.
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