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At this time of crisis in the Middle East, the supply chain strength of South Africa's Omnia is of major relevance from a mining perspective.
The Johannesburg Stock Exchange-listed Omnia has a strong grasp of ammonia-based emulsion and explosives inputs as well as key detonator capability, which adds value to mines by providing appropriate fragmentation and ensures that mines have the inputs to blast when they need them, which is so relevant amid what is being faced today – Middle East supply chain disruption.
"Our teams are very busy moving things around due to the situation in the Middle East, to make sure that our farmers and our mines have strong supply chains to allow them to plant and to blast," Omnia CEO Seelan Gobalsamy highlighted in an interview with Engineering News & Mining Weekly in Johannesburg on Wednesday, March 25. (Also watch attached Creamer Media video.)
From an explosives and mining perspective, Omnia expresses the belief that it has the strongest supply chain of ammonia-based emulsion and explosives inputs and that its detonator capability and technology add value through appropriate fragmentation, and enable mines to blast and have the inputs to blast when needed – "and that's so relevant in what the world is facing today, with the crisis in the Middle East".
Omnia, which is strongly rooted in South Africa, has 200 of its own ammonia rail tankers that transport as well as an ammonia storage capability.
It is a 70-year-old business that began in agriculture, and over the years moved into explosives, and chemicals, and today finds itself making a profound difference in the mining and agriculture markets.
Over the last five years, Omnia's mining explosives business has grown by 40% plus to the point of last year overtaking the agriculture business.
Omnia is a strong provider of food security and a deeply embedded provider of mining explosives across the African continent and across the world with operations in 23 countries.
"Our North Star is to be a very strong explosives provider across the world, not just in South Africa, and that's why we're investing in detonator plants, emulsion plants across the world, with partners. Our strong underpin is a business with values and a business with strategies and products that are doing what is right for the environment, not just for our generation, so that when our kids, when our grandkids, when their kids and grandkids walk the earth, it can be a better place than what it was when we walked the earth. Food can be healthier, there can be fewer chemicals being used, less water being used, and overall, the environment and the earth being better," Gobalsamy projected.
The company has a market capitalisation of just under R15-billion, zero debt and has been able to expand and recruit.
"We invest in a lot of young people. We hire 1% of our workforce a year as young graduates. We give them a job for a year, and then we expect them to find something in Omnia or elsewhere.
"A few years ago, we also decided to give everyone in our company shares. Everybody, no matter how senior or junior, got 300 shares, and we redid that programme a year later.
"Our belief is, if you do good, if you run a good business, the profit should follow. We've got a very noble purpose in enhancing life, and we believe everyone must share in that gain," Gobalsamy opined.
"Omnia was started by two very entrepreneurial individuals. They started, initially trading lime, and eventually moved into fertiliser.
"If I walk through the generations, in 1980 the company listed on the Johannesburg Stock Exchange. Since then, the company has continued to build large plants and if I talk through some of those milestones, we have the largest nitric acid plants in the Southern Afric...