Hwange Colliery pays outstanding salaries
HWANGE Colliery Company Ltd has paid its workers part of their outstanding salaries in
line with the Scheme of Arrangement, workers committee chairman Mr Garikai Sigauke said.
Mr Sigauke said the coal mining company paid 7 percent of the outstanding salaries, which
stood at about $80 million at the beginning of the year. “I can confirm that we got about 7
percent of what we are owed and workers are very excited about that,” he said. Last month,
HCCL creditors approved a Scheme of Arrangement that will stagger debt repayments.
The scheme also stopped litigations and writs of executions which had crippled the
company’s operations and it will allow the company to borrow money for working
capital. “There is a lot of business activity taking place in the town,” said Mr Sigauke.
The Scheme of Arrangement between Hwange and its creditors has begun yielding positive
results as witnessed a phenomenal increase in production between April and May.
Coal output increased from 52 000 tonnes to 170 000 tonnes, managing director Eng Thomasa
Makore said. The arrangement entailed a compromise with creditors to clear the debts over
a longer period freeing space for the company to operate productively. “Payment will be
generated from production so the focus certainly is that we increase production to
profitable volumes so that we are able to service commitments we have made to our
creditors,” Eng Makore said in a sideline interview during Kamandama Mine disaster
commemorations held in Hwange recently.
“What has paved the way for the boost in production is the scheme of arrangement. The ‘Yes
vote’ by Hwange Colliery creditors has opened up space for us to implement all our plans,
in the past 3-5 months we have been mobilising our meagre resources and focusing those
resources on production. I’m glad to let you know that in the month of May we had a big
jump in production, in April we achieved 52 000 tonnes and 170 000 tonnes in May. In the
prior months we were getting around 30 000-40 000 tonnes,” said Eng Makore.
He said 170 000 tonnes was a big step towards the company’s recovery but is targeting a
breakeven tonnage. “The biggest constraint in production has been working capital. Working
capital could not be availed when we were facing litigations, writs of execution and
attachments from some companies that had sued us,” he said.
Business Reporter