Rail Creates the Ore: Why Logistics Determines Mining Success
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What if the most important asset in mining is not the ore body but the logistics system that connects it to the market?
In this episode of #BelowTheSurface, Kevin Lester and Lily Nupen are joined by rail and freight logistics specialist Evert de Ruiter to explore the relationship between mining, infrastructure and economic growth.
The conversation begins with a historical observation. Many of Southern Africa’s great mineral deposits were known long before they became commercially viable mines. What changed was not the geology. It was the arrival of railways.
From the copper mines of O’Kiep to today’s bulk commodity corridors, Evert explains why logistics is not a support function but a core component of mining economics. He challenges executives to stop thinking of themselves as mining companies with logistics problems and instead to see themselves as logistics businesses with mining problems.
Topics include:
• Why rail infrastructure creates ore value
• The economics of manganese, iron ore, coal and chrome logistics
• Road versus rail transport economics
• South Africa’s National Rail Policy and rail reform agenda
• Private sector participation and concession models
• Economic regulation and freight competition
• How mining companies should engage in shaping logistics systems
• The future of South African freight corridors and export competitiveness
For mining executives, investors, lawyers, regulators and infrastructure professionals, this episode offers a practical and optimistic view of how transport systems shape economic development.
The central message is simple: mining does not begin at the mine gate. It begins where the ore reaches the ship. Kevin Lester Advisory · NSDV · Synthesis
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