Botswana mulling its coal-to-liquids options

SYNFUELS GIANT Sasol is a leader in the production of liquid fuels and chemicals from coal and gas
Botswana will consider setting up a coal-to-liquid (CTL) fuels industry to exploit the Southern African country’s resources and cut its annual import bill by about $338-million, the chamber of mines said.
“It’s not rocket science,” Charles Siwawa, chief executive officer of the Botswana Chamber of Mines, said in recent interview in Gaborone, where he is attending a conference on resources.
The chamber, along with the Ministry of Minerals and Botswana Investment and Trade Centre, will conduct a feasibility study over the next two years for the project, which would boost industries from fertilisers to plastics, Siwawa said.
He cited South Africa’s Sasol, the world’s biggest maker of motor fuels from coal, as the benchmark for any initiative.
“We’ve taken a strategic decision not to pursue any new CTL opportunities,” Alex Anderson, a spokesperson for Johannesburg-based Sasol, said. “Our focus is purely on gas liquids.”
Sasol produces more than 40% of South Africa’s motor fuel, using CTL and gas-to-liquids technology.
Botswana has an estimated coal resource of more than 200-billion tons and plans to ship 115-million tons of the fuel yearly within a decade to meet growing demand in China and India.
Siwawa said the chamber was pushing the governments of Botswana and Namibia to expedite the construction of the 1 500-km Trans-Kalahari railway linking the landlocked country’s biggest coal-mining region with the upgraded port of Walvis Bay, in Namibia.
A March agreement between Botswana and Namibia established a jointly owned company to administer the development of the $15-billion railway line by private investors.
Botswana also plans to study the potential for adding value to its copper and iron-ore mining operations as it tries to lure foreign investors, Siwawa said.
With five copper producers in the country, there is the potential for a combined smelter that would produce copper rods for export, he said. Botswana’s iron-ore mines may be capable of supporting a steel industry, Siwawa said.
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