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In his address at the 2026 Investing in African Mining Indaba in Cape Town recently, the Minister of Mineral Resources, Gwede Mantashe, said that the government is committed to creating a regulatory framework that attracts investment while ensuring that the benefits of the country’s mineral wealth are shared equitably with all South Africans.
However, clauses related to the imposition of Black Economic Empowerment (BEE) requirements in mining exploration were removed from the draft Mineral Resources Development Bill (MRDP).
Mantashe assured that this is not a “retreat from transformation” or an endorsement of the view that “Black participation is a barrier to economic growth”.
Nabeela Vally, head of business development at Edge Growth, spoke to Bizcommunity about the role of Black-owned SMEs in transforming South African mining.

Yes, it is possible, but only if transformation is treated as strategic rather than perfunctory.
This year’s Investing in Africa Mining Indaba emphasised that partnerships across government, industry, communities and financing partners are critical to unlocking inclusive economic outcomes.
The event’s theme, “Stronger together: Progress through partnerships”, reflects this reality: Complex agendas like transformation require alignment across stakeholders, not isolated compliance.
From an investment perspective, transformational pipelines that incorporate ESG principles, local participation and supplier development strengthen investor confidence, expanding capital flows into mining ventures that demonstrate real socio-economic impact.
This means BEE targets should be embedded into investment readiness criteria, deal structures, and project viability assessments.
Pushback arises because transformation is often framed as a cost or regulatory burden rather than a strategic growth driver.
Historical tensions include:
In reality, this year’s indaba messaging and industry discussions suggest that transformation and competitiveness must co-exist if mining is to support growth, jobs, and investment sustainably, but this requires intentional design, capability-building, and genuine partnership rather than box-ticking.
Absolutely! The Mining Indaba’s overarching theme is that inclusive growth and transformation are mutually reinforcing, not contradictory.
Growth creates opportunities for dynamic, scalable SME participation; transformation ensures that the benefits of that growth flow into historically disadvantaged groups.
However, co-existence depends on integrated approaches aligning transformation programmes with business strategy, capital flows, and operational realities rather than treating them as separate policy add-ons.
When transformation is integrated into value chain expansion, procurement strategy, local manufacturing, and investment models, both goals flourish together.
Yes, but with nuance. Exploration is not just an entry point; it’s a pipeline for real industrial participation by Black-owned firms.
Having BEE-related provisions in the MRDP could create clarity and incentives early in the mining lifecycle, signalling that transformation begins at the earliest stages of value creation.
But mandates alone are insufficient; what matters is how those clauses are designed:
Effective regulation should align transformation requirements with investment certainty so that the bill supports competitiveness as well as inclusion.
ESD must be strategically structured, contextualised, and partnership-driven to function as a growth engine.
A few key principles from current industry insights:
b). Expand beyond financial support.
The most effective ESD programmes combine:
c). Use partnerships and clusters
d). Leverage demand predictability
There are a few core elements that differentiate strong ESD programmes from weak ones:
b). Capability upliftment, not just capital support, should cover:
c). Integrated performance measurement. Instead of counting spend, measure:
d). Structured pathways to scaling strong programmes create tiered development pathways from micro-enterprise support to readiness for major contracts with milestones, accountability, and regular evaluation.
Transformation and growth are aligned when they are strategic, not regulatory afterthoughts.
