Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
Seite 557 von 983 Neuester Beitrag: 21.02.25 22:53 | ||||
Eröffnet am: | 29.09.07 14:50 | von: nekro | Anzahl Beiträge: | 25.569 |
Neuester Beitrag: | 21.02.25 22:53 | von: Fuchsbau24 | Leser gesamt: | 6.313.473 |
Forum: | Hot-Stocks | Leser heute: | 594 | |
Bewertet mit: | ||||
Seite: < 1 | ... | 555 | 556 | | 558 | 559 | ... 983 > |
es müssten doch so die Ein- und Abgänge der Stücke also die Bewegung ersichtlich sein. z. Bsp. PNG raus und xxx rein wenn das denn automatisch geschieht (Nominees ausgenommen) ;D)))
Die Eintragungen dürften sehr aktuell sein und maximal ein paar Tage dem IST hinterherhinken. Es könnte also einiges aus den Ein- und Abgängen ersichtlich sein.
Haken an der Sache. Wie vergleicht man etwas was man nicht hat?
Auf mehrfache hartnäckige Nachfrage habe ich einen Scan der Top20 von Anfang 2011 aus dem Geschäftsbericht bekommen. :-(((
Registrierte Shareholder können das Register bei computershare einsehen: Shareholders in BOUGAINVILLE COPPER LIMITED/BOC are able to view the register at one of our Australian offices at any time at no charge.
@Bocandorra: Bitte auf die ESBC HP einfügen!!! ;-))))))))))
01112OPEN PANGUNA
By Aloysius Laukai
The ABG President chief JOHN MOMIS wants the closed PANGUNA Copper mine on Bougainville island to reopen to support the ABG with much needed funds to deliver much needed services to the people of Bougainville.
Speaking on his weekly Radio Talk on New Dawn FM, chief Momis said that PANGUNA was a single impact project that can bail out Bougainville from its financial problems.
He explained this however would happen after a completely new agreement is negotiated with BCL and other stakeholders like the landowners. ABG and the PNG government.
ABG president Momis said that with the draw down of powers to the ABG it was becoming evident that only PANGUNA mine can provide that sort of funds.
Last week the deputy president of Meekamui unity government, PHILIP TAKAUNG called on President Momis to continue his work as they were behind his leadership.
And the MOU Awareness workshop in Tarlena was told by all the presenters that they could not fast tract preparations for the draw down due to funding constraints.
NEW DAWN FM understands that most of the funds allocated under the ABG 2012 appropriation arrived this week with only two weeks remaining to the close of all Government Accounts.
And most funds would be carried forward to next year or returned to the National Governments consolidated funds as un-used funds.
ends
1) Incorporation of individual Lease area associations and the umbrella landowner association;
2) Conflict resolution work in central and south Bougainville;
3) Conduct of baseline studies on Environmental, social, health and other baseline studies in the Mine Lease areas;
4)Public Awareness throughout the region and development of appropriate capacity and negotiation position by each party including a joint position by the ABG and Panguna Landowners Association and;
5) Reaching an agreed process for conduct off negotiations and conclusion of agreement.
Harry Anagnostaras-Adams, CEO of EMED Mining (LSE:EMED,TSX:EMD), which plans to restart the Rio Tinto (LSE:RIO,ASX:RIO,NYSE:RIO) open-pit copper mine.................)))))))))).
Chairman | Mr Paul Coleman, Manager PNG, Rio Tinto
3.Dezember
PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill will make a keynote address at the 12th PNG Mining and Investment Conference in Sydney on Monday and there is even some buzz that Petroleum and Energy Minister William Duma may attend.
Petroleum and Energy Minister William Duma. Image courtesy of United Resources Party.
Run by the PNG Chamber of Mines and Petroleum, the conference is in Sydney every two years and given the pace of PNG’s resources scene these days it might even be the biggest one yet.
It’s not always easy to get some PNG ministers to attend these events but O’Neill is locked in and has already made speeches to the National Press Club in Canberra and at the Lowy
Institute in Sydney this week.
Asked whether Duma will attend the key PNG mining and petroleum conference of this year, a chamber spokesperson told PNGIndustryNews.net: “I believe so even though he has not officially accepted.”
Executives from most of the PNG mining and petroleum players will make presentations over the three-day conference at Sydney’s Hilton hotel.
Perhaps the most anticipated talks will be on Newcrest Mining and Harmony Gold’s Wafi-Golpu copper-gold project, the Xstrata-led Frieda River copper-gold project, Marengo Mining’s Yandera copper-molybdenum-gold project and on Nautilus Mineral’s Solwara-1 copper-gold project, which was recently put on ice.
Another key drawcard will be the overview of InterOil’s Gulf LNG project proposal by Liquid Niugini Gas chief executive officer Henry Aldorf.
InterOil CEO Phil Mulacek will also make a separate presentation.
http://www.pngindustrynews.net/...toryid=9642743§ionsource=s0
The Papua New Guinea Mining and Petroleum Conference in Sydney will be a room full of white men dicing and slicing PNG’s assets with little or no participation or informed consent from the people of Papua New Guinea.
The smattering of Papua New Guinean faces will be from government departments and government regulatory bodies looking on benignly while the nations assets are stolen in front of their eyes.
It might be shocking, but it is the truth of the mining and petroleum industry in PNG – foreign companies completely in control of resources with Papua New Guineans either silently observing from the sidelines or being completely left out and in the dark.
Last time, the only landowner representatives were those brought by Sam Basil, MP for Bulolo, where two huge gold mines are being developed (Hidden Valley and Wafi) and the MP considered it fundamentally important that local leaders understand the framework of the developments and participate in discussions.
It won’t be a conference. It is a public relations exercise/sales pitch by the mining and petroleum/gas companies. Presentations by the CEOs of these companies will be scheduled in groups of four with the chairperson of each essentially coming from the PNG Chamber of Mines and Petroleum – the industry funded body that promotes mining and petroleum companies in PNG.
No questions will be allowed – none at all. It will just be propaganda speeches about how good each company is and how much money they are going to make out of someone else resources.
There won’t be any participation by landowners.
No questions about what all these mining/petroleum and “investments” have achieved in terms of human or structural development of PNG.
No acknowledgement or discussion of the disastrous environmental effects of mining in PNG.
No discussion of rehabilitation or mitigation of environmental damage.
No discussion of increasing PNG wealth or equity.
Just glowing report cards and predictions of massive profits into the future for the companies.
Die 14 tägige Aufklärungungsmission hat glaub ich nichts mit den noch ausstehenden 3 Foren zu tun .
#13909
Diese Meldung kam vor einem Jahr und wird auf der Esbc Seite als News deklariert
Hab ich was verpasst ?
Bitte um Aufklärung ....Dankeschön
Peter O’Neill to set out his new vision on PNG energy deals
Rowan Callick | The Australian
PAPUA New Guinean Prime Minister Peter O’Neill will today turn the page on the country’s mining and energy policy, acknowledging Australia’s $16 billion investment in the sector and urging a new dialogue with its government and the industry about ways to reduce costs and boost productivity.
In a keynote speech to the country’s biannual mining and investment conference in Sydney today, he will offer to fast-track investments in energy projects that focus on domestic supply rather than exports.
But he will admit the country has “been far too complacent about cost blowouts in the construction phases of our major projects” — with the liquefied natural gas project being built by ExxonMobil recently announcing a 20 per cent cost surge, to $19bn.
He is expected to announce plans to establish a Productivity Commission to advise the government on making the economy more competitive.
He will encourage fly-in, fly-out schemes within PNG, rather than involve Australia.
And he will provide some details about guidelines for the wide-ranging review, announced in the recent budget, into taxes and other charges that affect mining and petroleum.
Mr O’Neill is expected to stress that the country needs “a modern and competitive resource tax regime”, and that any changes resulting from the review should not “act as a significant disincentive to investment or international competitiveness”.
But he will add that he “cannot hold out the promise of massive cuts in taxes and charges”.
The country had a resource rental tax — introduced at the suggestion of Australian economist Ross Garnaut, who was in the Finance Department in PNG during its independence period in the 1970s. It was abolished in 2003.
Among the issues to be canvassed in the new review, the Prime Minister will say, is “whether the cost and time consumed in lodging returns and reporting can be cut”.
The country’s economy will grow 9 per cent in this year and growth is expected to peak in 2015, when the first exports will be shipped from the Exxon LNG project.
But Mr O’Neill will anticipate that “the record capital spending now under way in the petroleum sector will slow significantly from 2013 unless we bring new projects to the approval and development stages soon”.
While his government is “fully committed” to that, “we don’t just want projects that have an export focus alone”.
His government is seeking the “right mix” of more LNG projects and others “totally focused on our domestic gas and energy needs, including gas capable of driving rural and regional electrification and meeting the energy needs of new mining projects”.
Mr O’Neill is expected to pledge to speed up the approval process for projects and to support the early development of stranded gas and other gas resources “that will create jobs, boost investment and meet domestic energy needs”.
“We also need new mining projects, not just large-scale projects.”
Mr O’Neill also wants investors “to look at taking on board Papua New Guinean investors and partners from the outset”.
He will tell the conference: “We have successful contractors, transport operators, engineers and other professionals, retailers, farmers and manufacturers and processors, all with funds, or who can get access to funds, that can be used to participate directly in the next phase of the development of the resources sector.”
The government, he will say, wants to help PNG businesses “get the lion’s share of work that is undertaken by contractors and suppliers”.
Mr O’Neill is expected to say that while PNG governments have been “reasonable, if not generous” about fly-in, fly-out arrangements for major resource projects, “I want to encourage a review of these arrangements so that more of our own resort areas and regional centres, can benefit”, with companies given incentives to operate FIFO schemes wholly within PNG, instead of rotating staff out of Australia.
He will also stress that his government “will not tolerate the speculative trading” in exploration licences where no activity has taken place for a long time.
Such licences would be forfeited and the areas advertised and put to tender, “as happens here in Australia”.
http://ramumine.wordpress.com/2012/12/03/...rning-bright-but-for-who/
PNG working on infrastructure and corruption
Quelle: http://www.pngblogs.com/