RECORDED | Ramaphosa addresses mining indaba

The mining industry gives insight into what the future of mining will look like in years to come.

A hydrogen-powered truck, part of Anglo American Plc's NuGen carbon-neutral project, dumps a load during a moving demonstration at the Anglo American Platinum Ltd. Mogalakwena platinum mine in Mogalakwena, South Africa, on Friday, May 6, 2022. Anglo American unveiled the worlds biggest green-hydrogen powered truck at a platinum mine in northeast South Africa where it aims to replace a fleet of 40 diesel-fueled vehicles that each use about a million liters of the fossil fuel every year. Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg
A hydrogen-powered truck, part of Anglo American Plc's NuGen carbon-neutral project, dumps a load during a moving demonstration at the Anglo American Platinum Ltd. Mogalakwena platinum mine in Mogalakwena, South Africa, on Friday, May 6, 2022. Anglo American unveiled the worlds biggest green-hydrogen powered truck at a platinum mine in northeast South Africa where it aims to replace a fleet of 40 diesel-fueled vehicles that each use about a million liters of the fossil fuel every year. Photographer: Waldo Swiegers/Bloomberg (Waldo Swiegers)

The Investing in African Mining Indaba started in Cape Town on Monday.

The indaba will run until Thursday, with the mining industry providing insights into what the future of mining will look like in years to come.

The event takes place under the theme: “Evolution of African Mining: Investing in the Energy Transition, ESG, and the Economies.”

It has been described as the place where the industry moves forward.

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