Maganyeni Holdings is committed to giving clients quality services that satisfy their expectations in compliance with regulatory and statutory requirements. In doing so, we ensure the sustainability of our business.

The company continually improves the effectiveness of the quality management system in line with ISO 9001 standards. All our subsidiaries adhere to Quality Management System manuals which contain activities and standards to be followed on all contracts as well as internal departments and to comply with the minimum requirements of ISO 9001. Continual improvement is one of the cornerstones of our business and is being communicated on a regular basis, throughout the organisation. All employees are made aware of the quality standards and its objectives and are committed to its implementation.

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    Category Archives: Uncategorized

    Caprice ventures into West Arunta with project acquisition

    Perth-based Caprice Resources on Thursday announced plans to acquire a project in the West Arunta region of Western Australia.

    Spanning over 1 479 km2, the Bantam project comprises four contiguous tenements, strategically positioned adjacent WA1 Resources’ site that hosts the Luni niobium/rare earth element discovery.

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    China April coal imports rise on lower domestic output, summer restocks

    China’s coal imports rose in April, customs data showed on Thursday, fuelled by lower domestic production and greater buying by power generators to swell stockpiles ahead of the peak summer demand season.

    Shipments of coal into the world’s largest consumer of the fuel were 45.25-million metric tons last month, up 11% from 40.68-million a year earlier, the data from the General Administration of Customs showed.

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    Lotus confirms significant uranium potential in updated Letlhakane MRE

    ASX-listed Lotus Resources has published a revised mineral resource estimate (MRE) of 155.3-million tonnes, grading 345 parts per million (ppm) triuranium octoxide (U3O8), for the Letlhakane uranium project, in Botswana.

    This means the project can deliver 80-million pounds of recovered uranium over its life, based on a 70% recovery rate, the company says.

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    BHP-Anglo American deal raises alarm in Japan’s steel industry

    Japanese steelmakers have raised concerns with Australian authorities that BHP Group could become too dominant in the global supply of coking coal if it goes ahead with a takeover of Anglo American.

    Australia is the world’s biggest exporter of coking coal and top supplier to Japan, making up around 60% of its imports, with most of the steel-making ingredient coming from the state of Queensland, where BHP and Anglo American are the two largest producers.

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    De Beers progresses diamond traceability, emissions reduction targets

    As part of efforts to provide increased provenance across the diamond industry, De Beers plans to bring the first non-De Beers Group goods onto its Tracr platform this year. The Tracr platform uses blockchain, AI, the Internet of Things and advanced security and privacy technology to track a diamond’s journey from where it is mined and throughout the value chain, providing consumers tamper-proof assurance of where the diamond comes from.

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    Pan African confident of meeting upper end of full-year production guidance

    South African gold producer Pan African Resources has revised its full-year production guidance to between 186 000 oz and 190 000 oz, compared with previous guidance of 180 000 oz to 190 000 oz, while maintaining its all-in sustaining cost guidance at between $1 325/oz and $1 350/oz. In an update to shareholders about the group’s production expectations for the full financial year to end June 30, it says it ceased processing of marginal surface sources at Evander Gold Mines during the second half of the financial year, as the processing of this material was becoming uneconomical.

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    April was strong for gold but ‘stagflation’ concerns abound – WGC

    According to the World Gold Council (WGC), gold had another good month in April, posting a 4% gain and ending the month at $2 307/oz. “Unlike March, gold finished off its intra-month high from probable buyer reticence and profit-taking, reflected in falling Chinese premia, lower Indian imports and flat-lining Comex positioning.

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    South Deep wind power decision drawing closer, Q2 update likely on backfill problem

    Mining company Gold Fields expects to be in a position to decide on the establishment of a wind power project at the South Deep gold mine, west of Johannesburg, in the third quarter of this year. The project is currently undergoing scoping and feasibility and one of the key pieces of work has been around its environmental impact in general and its effect on a bat colony that exists in the nearby area in particular, Gold Fields CEO Mike Fraser said in response to Mining Weekly at this week’s first-quarter results and environmental, social and governance (ESG) presentation. (Also watch attached Creamer Media video.)

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    JSE undertaking measures to mitigate de-listing, shrinkage

    The JSE is undertaking several initiatives to mitigate de-listings and reduced market capitalisation, chairperson Phuthuma Nhleko said during the entity’s AGM on May 7. Speaking to Engineering News prior to the meeting, consultancy and research provider AmaranthCX director Paul Miller posited that the entire public market ecosystem was “withering” and that the JSE’s communication did not reflect the extent of this problem.

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    Leo Lithium sells Mali project to Ganfeng for $342m

    Australia-listed Leo Lithium has announced it is exiting the Goulamina project, in Mali, with the sale of its remaining 40% interest to joint venture (JV) partner Ganfeng.

    The Chinese group will pay Leo $342.7-million for the remaining stake in Goulamina.

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