{"id":2847732,"version":0,"headline":"Transalloys shuts down S Africa’s last Mn smelter","dateModified":"2026-07-03T17:04:09Z","datePublished":"2026-07-03T14:06:52Z","articleBody":"<article><p class=\"lead\">South African manganese alloy producer Transalloys has ceased all production at its last remaining smelter in the country because of an inability to compete caused by high-rate electricity tariffs, the company said on Thursday. </p><p>The silico-manganese and ferro-manganese producer shut down all furnaces on 1 July, as negotiations over electricity tariffs with energy utility Eskom and the South African government's Department of Energy and Electricity (DEE) continued. </p><p>Transalloys is a major producer of manganese ferro-alloys across Africa, accounting for about 80pc of the world's high-grade manganese ore reserves and 155,000 t/yr of alloy output. Halted production and the potential permanent closure of the smelter would significantly hit customers who rely on South African alloy supply. </p><p>The suspension of the smelter places about 600 permanent jobs and an estimated 7,000 downstream livelihoods at risk.</p><p>Transalloys officially concluded Section 189 consultations and a collective retrenchment agreement, based on the plant's financial distress since the end of 2022. Transalloys will continue negotiations with Eskom to achieve a sustainable solution until 31 July, when the retrenchment notice will be issued. </p><p>Rising energy tariffs in South Africa over the past three years have weighed on ferro-alloy producers and driven persistent financial losses at smelters that have been unable to offset higher rates through significant price increases to customers. </p><p>\"In the past 3½ years, Transalloys' production was curtailed due to sluggish demand globally,\" chief executive Konstantin Sadovnik told <i>Argus</i>.</p><p>The shutdown follows Transalloys' hardship notice to Eskom and Nersa, South Africa's national energy regulator, in December, through which it sought short-term relief from the electricity tariffs. Since then, the <a href=\"https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2845554\">ferro-chrome industry has secured reduced tariff rates</a> after ongoing discussions with Eskom and has been granted intermediary reduced tariff solutions. </p><p>\"What we do not understand is why that same blueprint cannot now be extended to the remaining non-ferro-chrome smelters, namely manganese and ferro-silicon, representing only 11pc of the ferro-alloys sector in terms of power consumption,\" Sadovnik said. </p><p>Glencore Merafe Chrome Venture, one of South Africa's two main ferro-chrome producers, secured a new pricing framework set for three years.</p><p>\"Now that the framework exists, it is difficult to understand why the rest of the sector continues to face lengthy negotiations with no certainty or timeline,\" Sadovnik said. </p><p>\"It has been a tough uphill battle,\" Sadovnik added. \"Our business has been losing substantial amounts of money for the past 3½ years. We have done everything possible to reduce costs, conserve cash, raise awareness and engage government, Eskom and the regulators to find and implement a sustainable electricity tariff solution. Now, effectively, our destiny is in the hands of Eskom, Nersa and DEE — they are to determine whether Transalloys lives or dies. Further procrastination will amount to a death sentence.\"</p><p class=\"bylines\">By Lauren Hadeed</p></article>","dateline":"London, 3 July (Argus)","license":"<footer><p><br> Send comments and request more information at <a href=\"mailto:feedback@argusmedia.com?subject=Argus Direct article feedback&body=I am contacting you regarding Transalloys shuts down S Africa’s last Mn smelter , available at http://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/cs-24733169.\" target=\"_parent\"> feedback@argusmedia.com </a></p><p><i> Copyright © 2026. <a href=\"http://www.argusmedia.com/\" target=\"_blank\">Argus Media group</a>. All rights reserved. </i></p></footer>","copyrightHolder":"Argus Media group","copyrightYear":2026,"taxonomy":{"contexts":[{"name":"Fundamentals","children":[{"name":"Supply","children":[]}]}],"regions":[{"name":"Africa","children":[{"name":"Southern Africa","children":[{"name":"South Africa","children":[]}]}]}],"sectors":[{"name":"Metals","children":[{"name":"Non-ferrous","children":[{"name":"Ferro-alloys and ores","children":[{"name":"Ferro-manganese","children":[]},{"name":"Silico-manganese","children":[]}]}]}]}]},"pullQuote":null,"newsType":"Daily news","language":"en-GB","keywords":null,"isFree":true,"isFeatured":false,"body":"<p class=\"lead\">South African manganese alloy producer Transalloys has ceased all production at its last remaining smelter in the country because of an inability to compete caused by high-rate electricity tariffs, the company said on Thursday. </p><p>The silico-manganese and ferro-manganese producer shut down all furnaces on 1 July, as negotiations over electricity tariffs with energy utility Eskom and the South African government's Department of Energy and Electricity (DEE) continued. </p><p>Transalloys is a major producer of manganese ferro-alloys across Africa, accounting for about 80pc of the world's high-grade manganese ore reserves and 155,000 t/yr of alloy output. Halted production and the potential permanent closure of the smelter would significantly hit customers who rely on South African alloy supply. </p><p>The suspension of the smelter places about 600 permanent jobs and an estimated 7,000 downstream livelihoods at risk.</p><p>Transalloys officially concluded Section 189 consultations and a collective retrenchment agreement, based on the plant's financial distress since the end of 2022. Transalloys will continue negotiations with Eskom to achieve a sustainable solution until 31 July, when the retrenchment notice will be issued. </p><p>Rising energy tariffs in South Africa over the past three years have weighed on ferro-alloy producers and driven persistent financial losses at smelters that have been unable to offset higher rates through significant price increases to customers. </p><p>\"In the past 3½ years, Transalloys' production was curtailed due to sluggish demand globally,\" chief executive Konstantin Sadovnik told <i>Argus</i>.</p><p>The shutdown follows Transalloys' hardship notice to Eskom and Nersa, South Africa's national energy regulator, in December, through which it sought short-term relief from the electricity tariffs. Since then, the <a href=\"https://direct.argusmedia.com/newsandanalysis/article/2845554\">ferro-chrome industry has secured reduced tariff rates</a> after ongoing discussions with Eskom and has been granted intermediary reduced tariff solutions. </p><p>\"What we do not understand is why that same blueprint cannot now be extended to the remaining non-ferro-chrome smelters, namely manganese and ferro-silicon, representing only 11pc of the ferro-alloys sector in terms of power consumption,\" Sadovnik said. </p><p>Glencore Merafe Chrome Venture, one of South Africa's two main ferro-chrome producers, secured a new pricing framework set for three years.</p><p>\"Now that the framework exists, it is difficult to understand why the rest of the sector continues to face lengthy negotiations with no certainty or timeline,\" Sadovnik said. </p><p>\"It has been a tough uphill battle,\" Sadovnik added. \"Our business has been losing substantial amounts of money for the past 3½ years. We have done everything possible to reduce costs, conserve cash, raise awareness and engage government, Eskom and the regulators to find and implement a sustainable electricity tariff solution. Now, effectively, our destiny is in the hands of Eskom, Nersa and DEE — they are to determine whether Transalloys lives or dies. Further procrastination will amount to a death sentence.\"</p><p class=\"bylines\">By Lauren Hadeed</p>","lead":"South African manganese alloy producer Transalloys has ceased all production at its last remaining smelter in the country because of an inability to compete caused by high-rate electricity tariffs, the company said on Thursday. ","cmsId":"24733169","source":"Censhare"}