Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948


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140 Postings, 6503 Tage pezz88#13360 Böcklein...

 
  
    #13376
25.10.12 19:08
...eines hast Du noch vergessen:

Man könnte sich ja mal wieder den Spaß machen auf Basis der aktuellen Marktpreise die Reserven je Aktie zu berechnen.

Hat jemand noch die Berechnung parat?  

933 Postings, 4718 Tage LOFPGerade gevotet!

 
  
    #13377
25.10.12 19:10

933 Postings, 4718 Tage LOFP@nekro

 
  
    #13378
25.10.12 19:16
Wie komme ich in den 707 Club?
Ich wollte die Mitgliedschaft beantragen und als Antwort bekomme ich, dass ich bereits eingeladen wurde. Vielen Dank dafür!
Wo sehe ich das und wie kann ich die Einladung annehmen?
VG  

795 Postings, 6099 Tage upholmso meine Votes sind auch durch...

 
  
    #13379
25.10.12 19:36
... meine Böcke liegen jetzt auch schon länger (2004) in meinem Depot und der Bestand wächst noch.
Bin mit dem Investment bisher auch sehr zufrieden, hat mich seit 2008 gut durch die diversen Krisen gebracht. Aber wie ich schon geschrieben habe, müssen endlich Fakten veröffentlicht werden und das als Ad hoc von Bougainville Copper bzw. Rio Tinto, sonst wird am Kurs wenig passieren.
Evtl. könnte Swen ja auch mal seine Studie überarbeiten und die Erfolge auf politischer Seite, die Versöhnungsfeiern und das JSB Meeting mit aufnehmen. Dies sollte unserer Aktie auch mal wieder ein wenig Schwung verleihen, da sich dann evtl. auch mal wieder andere Börsenbriefe für  BOC interessieren und so Kaufinteresse generieren. Vielleicht kann ja jemand mit Kontakt zu Swen mal den Stein ins rollen bringen.  

468 Postings, 5000 Tage macouba...ist Swen überhaupt noch investiert ????

 
  
    #13380
25.10.12 19:40
er hatte über die arbb in der schweiz (http://www.arbb.ch) investments in BOC getätigt, diese aber alle verkauft (aus den geschäftsberichten ersichtlich). ggfs. hat er ja über andere gesellschaften oder privatvermögen bestände??? ist jemanden da etwas bekannt????  

378 Postings, 5272 Tage BöckleinEndlich wieder Schwung im Kurs ... wäre schön ...

 
  
    #13381
25.10.12 19:46

@Longwilli #13362
Du verstehst mich miss, wenn Du meinst, ich sei frustriert. Das könnte ich wohl nur dann sein, wenn ich bzgl. des zeitlichen Rahmens etwas Anderes erwartet hätte als das, was in den vergangenen Jahren eingetreten ist.
Wenn Du meine Einschätzungen kennen lernen möchtest („Wir wollen sie wissen“ = Pluralis majestatis?), nimm Dir einfach etwas Zeit und lies sie Dir an verschiedenen Stellen dieses Forums durch.
   
--- „Du wirst schnell merken, das es Mut kostet, eine Meinung zur (BCL-Minen-)Zukunft zu haben.“
Nö, Mut, eine Meinung zu haben? Weshalb das denn?
 
Wozu es allerdings keinen Anlass gab und gibt, ist Übermut. Und dieser trotz jahrelanger Erfahrungen konservierte Übermut des Einen oder Anderen hier, was die Panguna–Zeitleiste und das immer wiederkehrende euphorische „Jetzt geht’s los!“ angeht, war und ist der Grund für #13360 .
 
--- „Und vielleicht wird es dann jemanden geben, der dich für deine Meinung abwatscht.
Zum „Abwatschen“ gibt es bis dato keinen Grund: Meine zeitliche Prognose ist voll intakt – im Gegensatz zu den vielen anderen, die hier in den letzten Jahren immer wieder revidiert werden mussten (S. #13360!)
   
@antares #13363
--- „du möchtest von den Böcken selbst mal Cash sehen
Ja selbstverständlich, Du etwa nicht?
 
--- „was willst den mit der Kohle sonst machen: Immobilien kaufen und deinen Erben Kosten hinterlassen?
Was „Erben“ betrifft, gilt wie schon weiter oben geschrieben: Es gibt hier inzwischen deutlich mehr als nur einen Schreiber resp. „Nur“-Leser, der sich mittlerweile gedanklich darauf eingestellt hat, dass seine Böcke bei gleichbleibendem Tempo der Entwicklung auf Bougainville nur noch seinen Erben zugute kommen könnten.
   
Darüber hinaus kann ich mich sehr mit den zeitlichen Aussichten identifizieren, die BOC-Koala, sellongoodnews und oyoo in ihren Posts postulieren. Und ich kann es teils auch mit Deinen Annahmen, z. B. dann, wenn Du schreibst „Sobald die Weichen richtig gestellt sind, …“, denn dieser Gedanke impliziert logischerweise, dass diese Weichen – was immer Du damit meinst – momentan noch nicht richtig gestellt sind.
Was Du allerdings meinst, wenn Du schreibst, dass „da manche verlernt sind, was es heißt zu investieren“ … und „dass manche Bauern bis zum Winter warten, bis die Ernte reif ist“ … und „dass in dieser Zeit jeder nur das schnelle Money machen will“ (Jeder = auch Du?) – das musst Du mir bei Gelegenheit noch mal etwas genauer erklären. 
         
Apropos „Inoffiziell geht die Rede davon, …“ Schön wäre es und ich hätte überhaupt gar nichts dagegen, wenn Momis seine politische Karriere mit der Unabhängigkeit Bougainvilles krönen könnte. „Könnte“, „dürfte“, „hätte“ … dann stimme ich mal ein in diesen Sprech:
Es könnte aber auch alles völlig anders kommen. Im australischen Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade geht inoffiziell die Rede davon, sich auf eine Erweiterung des Zeitfensters für ein mögliches Referendum auf Bougainville einzustellen. Was „erweitern“ hieße, lässt sich denken. Alles nur Planspiele? Einen – inoffiziellen – Plan B zu haben, scheint jedenfalls ein – momentan noch – recht kleiner Zirkel dort für opportun zu halten …
   
Und ja, mit dem von Dir @Nekro aktuell anvisierten Jahr 2020 für Deine Party in Verbindung mit der dann stattfindenden Wiedereröffnung lese ich zum ersten Mal ein realistisches Datum, das auch ich für möglich halte ... "Wir werden sehen", sprach der Blinde.
 
   
Schönen Abend und schöne Herbst- und Winterwochen!
 

 

286 Postings, 7194 Tage bergfex58Registrierung der Böcke bei der DAB

 
  
    #13382
25.10.12 22:15
hab was unter #213  gepostet, FOB, eigentumssicherung..........  

555 Postings, 6503 Tage BOCandorraVorbereitungen...

 
  
    #13383
2
26.10.12 03:29
...für die Wiedereröffnung der Panguna Mine laufen an: www.bougainville-copper.eu !

1335 Postings, 6506 Tage TraderevilOrderbuch ASX.....

 
  
    #13384
26.10.12 08:26
... füllt sich auch  wieder langsam,etwas zäh aber immerhin wird grün etwas dominierender nach meiner Wahrnehmung. ;D))))  

1335 Postings, 6506 Tage Traderevil@ Böcklein......

 
  
    #13385
26.10.12 08:42
Anhängern der Chaos Theorie ist bekannt das durch die Anwendung des richtigen Algorythmus
so etwas wie Struktur in ein System gebracht wird die es erlaubt Berechnungen anzustellen an dessen Ende ein Ergebniss mit erstaunlicher Treffsicherheit stehen kann.

Meines Wissens wird diese Erkenntniss heutzutage auch in der längersfristigen Wettervorhersage verwendet. Die Ergebnisse sind ja wohl jedem der ab und zu mal an die frische Luft geht bekannt.;D)))))))
Was ich damit sagen will ist: alle diese Vermutungen/Hypothesen = kann sein/kann nicht  sein.

Also warum sich um ungelegte Eier aufregen  ?
Ich bleibe lieber neugierig und lasse mich überraschen.

moin,moin  

15644 Postings, 6507 Tage nekro#13375

 
  
    #13386
26.10.12 10:16
Hier im Thread wurde schon mehrfach der Unmut darüber geäussert dass die da unten "auf den Bäumen" einfach nicht in die Pötte kämen. Darüber scheinen einige zu vergessen dass bis jetzt immer noch PNG das Sagen (und die $$$) hat.Ginge es nach den gebildeten Bougainvillern, Panguna wäre schon längst wiedereröffnet, ist es doch die einzige Möglichkeit für die breitere Bevölkerung Arbeitsplätze u. Einkommensquellen zu erschliessen.Eine organisierte Anti-Miningfront gibt es auf Boug. nicht, es werden lediglich faire Verhandlungen,ausstehende Royaltys u. hohe Umweltschutzstandards wie sie mittlerweile fast überall in der zivilisierten Welt üblich sind verlangt.

Seit O`Neill fest im Sattel sitzt hat der positive Newsflow beträchtlich zugenommen, erste konkrete Schritte haben stattgefunden (Permanente JSB Arbeitsgruppe in POM ,überweisung der 100 Mill. Kina) weitere Schritte (Airport,Hafen,Strassenrestaurierungen  etc) wurden angekündigt.

Von den vergangenen Zeitspannen jetzt auf die noch benötigten zu schliessen könnte sich als etwas zu kurzsichtig erweisen.

Wer sagt denn dass es sich bei dem "Partydatum" um die Wiedereröffnung handeln muss, es könnte sich genausogut um das Cashen der x ten  Divi handeln. ;-)))))))))

396 Postings, 4757 Tage BOC-KoalaIch hoffe....

 
  
    #13387
26.10.12 11:24
das GOVERNMENT OF MEEKAMUI sieht das auch so.

Ich bleibe dabei:
Nicht alle Bougies sind (heute) bereit von den Bäumen zu kommen.
Da fehlt ein nicht zu vernachlässigender Bevölkerungsanteil.
Ein goßer Teil wird sich mit einem "ordentlichen" BELKOL von den Bäumen locken lassen.
Ich denke sie werden kommen, aber nicht heute und nicht morgen.

Zur Party will ich meine ersten Dividendenscheck von Paul bekommen. ;-)
Bis dahin könnte der Vollausbau zu schaffen sein.  

1335 Postings, 6506 Tage Traderevil@ nekro.....

 
  
    #13388
26.10.12 11:50
Zitat:
Wer sagt denn dass es sich bei dem "Partydatum" um die Wiedereröffnung handeln muss, es könnte sich genausogut um das Cashen der x ten  Divi handeln. ;-)))))))))


....hatte den gleichen Gedanken und desshalb vorsorglich die Anmeldung gebucht.  ;D))))  

1025 Postings, 4828 Tage antares0650Freud´scher Versprecher???

 
  
    #13389
2
26.10.12 12:32

K7m allocated for feeder roads  By VERONICA HANNETTE   WORK on feeder roads in Bougainville are underway says the Minister for Works, Transport and Civil Aviation, Carolus Ketsimur (pictured).     ABG Minister Carolus Ketsimur Minister Ketsimur said the K100 million given by the National Government for high impact projects is currently available and funds have been allocated to different projects in the province.     He said K7 million has been earmarked for feeder roads around the province enabling local farmers to have access to better roads.  Minister Ketsimur said most of the feeder roads in the province have caused inconvenience to some extent resulting in adequate service delivery denied to certain areas.  Minister Ketsimur said the other portion of the funds will be allocated for other higher impact projects such as the sealing of roads, the Buka ring road, the Torokina oil palm project, Peace and Reconciliation and the re-opening of the Copper Mine.

Der weiss was......

 

15644 Postings, 6507 Tage nekroMorumbi Resources Inc.

 
  
    #13390
3
27.10.12 07:57

www.morumbi.ca

Bougainville is home to the legendary Panguna mine, formerly operated by Bougainville Copper, a subsidiary of Rio Tinto (LSE:RIO). At the time of its shuttering in 1989, it was the world’s largest copper mine and still holds considerable reserves of both gold and copper according to BCL updated estimates.

Prior to the outbreak of the Bougainville crisis, there had been a moratorium on exploration on the island with the exception of the Special Mining Lease on which the mine was situated. On the outbreak of the crisis the moratorium was extended over the whole island, a situation that has not changed with the ceasefire and the establishment of the Autonomous Bougainville Government. We believe many companies may be waiting for the passage of new legislation, particularly a new Mining Law.

During this period Morumbi has been the only company reaching out to the various Landowners’ Groups to build meaningful long-term relationships based on mutual respect and trust. Consistent with the Bougainville Constitution, our underlying philosophy has always been that any mineral resources are the property of people under whose traditional lands they lie, and that those resources can only be exploited with their cooperation and involvement in partnership.

As a result of this unique approach, we have entered into 7 agreements by way of MOU’s with different Landowner Companies representing the people of their respective areas, namely, Isina, Pakasiapan (Kopani), Avaipa (Mainoki), Baunapa (Atamo) Eruupia (Kawatsia), Karato and Papatana (Korovi). We also believe that we should be able to convert all the MOU’s into Licenses if and when a new Mining Law comes into force, subject to approval by the relevant authorities.

In June of 2012, The Legislature approved a review of Draft Mining policy for consideration by the Executive Branch for later submission and approval of Parliament. Deputations from the various Landowners’ Groups to the ABG over the last several weeks have pushed for early passage of a number of laws.

We strongly believe that passage of a New Mining Law will prompt a rush of Multinational mining companies to try and secure Licenses on the island.                    

468 Postings, 5000 Tage macoubaältere Studien über boc

 
  
    #13391
27.10.12 11:25
sind auf den seiten des south african institute of mining and metallurgy zu finden wie bspw:

http://www.saimm.co.za/Conferences/Apcom72/036-Blackwell.pdf

http://www.saimm.co.za/Conferences/Apcom87Metallurgy/241-Hess.pdf

vielleicht für den einen oder anderen interessant :-)  

468 Postings, 5000 Tage macoubaelephants, dragons and sharks ....

 
  
    #13392
6
27.10.12 11:40
habe noch eine draft version als word-dokument im internet von peter taylor gefunden. zwar schon von mitte nov. 2011, vielleicht wurde diese hier auch schon gespostet, aber doch immer mal wieder lesenswert :-)  

Address by Peter Taylor executive chairman of BCL to Australia PNG Business Council in Madang 17.5.11  Thank you. It is a pleasure to be able to speak to this meeting today, coming as it does close on the heels of the thirtieth anniversary dinner of the Australia Papua New Guinea Business Council, an organisation founded by the late Don Vernon, a predecessor of mine as Chairman of Bougainville Copper.  I can also report that the Don Vernon scholarship, substantially supported by BCL for post graduate study in minerals processing at Queensland University, has been awarded to Mr Chris Akop, and we wish him a successful term of higher studies and research.  Among other things, I want to briefly talk to you today about elephants, gorillas, sharks... and a dragon.  Among people who seek to discover and develop mineral resources, Papua New Guinea continues to enjoy its reputation as elephant country.  It is good hunting sense to go looking for minerals where minerals have already been found: you look for elephants in elephant country.  The experience has been if you go hunting here, and you find something, it’s likely to be pretty big.  Ok Tedi plying the Fly River for thirty years, Porgera consuming Mt Waruwari for twenty years, and Lihir grinding day and night for a little bit shorter time, but with plenty remaining, have all proven to be world class mines. All producing in the order of seven hundred thousand ounces of gold or gold equivalent per year, and I might say, year after year.  The joint venturers at Wafi Golpu and at Freida River believe that these too might produce a million ounces of gold equivalent per year, for twenty years or more.  The geology underlying all of these mega-projects is by and large the same, having the characteristic footprint of Papua New Guinea’s position on the Pacific Rim of Fire.  The new LNG projects, both of them, in relation to the size of the PNG economy, are also quite large, although the more advanced of the two is unflatteringly described by some not as an elephant, but more a gorilla, such is its power to draw resources, both material and human, into its grasp.  Bougainville Copper is also an elephant-sized resource, somewhat depleted, but with more gold and copper still in the ground than has already been produced. Page 1  In the seventeen years that the Bougainville copper mine has operated so far, from 1972 to 1989, it has produced and sold concentrate containing 9 million ounces of gold and 3 million tonnes of copper.  And we all know that the mine was the mainstay of the PNG economy for a decade, before the other projects began to kick in through the eighties and nineties...quite an achievement given that gold and copper prices were nowhere near the levels they are today.  Bougainville Copper has undertaken an Order of Magnitude Study, which indicates that the resource in the mining lease at Panguna still contains a billion tonnes of payable ore, subject of course to assumptions regarding the prices for copper and gold.  This study supports a planned rate of mining and processing of 50 million tonnes of ore per annum, producing perhaps 450,000 ounces of gold and 170,000 tonnes of copper per year over a mine life up to twenty years.  So it has been an elephant, and it remains a pretty robust member of that species still.  And it has other attributes that make it a continuingly attractive target.  It’s not green field. We’ve been there for those seventeen years of operation and waited another twenty years since, and there is not much we don’t know about our ore body, and our host community.  And there are seven adjacent exploration licence areas which offer the very tangible prospect of further significant discoveries. Once the long standing moratorium on exploration is lifted, I believe the circumstances in the Autonomous Bougainville Region will eventually see that constraint relaxed.  Here in Papua New Guinea where we work, it’s not only the resources that may be elephant sized. Also very large are the issues of expectation, aspiration and participation that need to be managed.  Enough has already been said and written about the recent history of Bougainville, about what might have gone wrong and what we can learn from the whole experience.  At Bougainville Copper, we are very mindful of those lessons, but together with the Government and people of the Autonomous Region, we are looking forward.  There is a very wide consensus on Bougainville today that peace and continuing good order will be best achieved by economic means. That the normal aspirations of the people for a good life and a fulfilling future for their children will be delivered by employment, training, regular income, infrastructure and business activity.  Page 2  After a few false starts the consensus is now firmly in favour of BCL being the preferred operator of the mine at Panguna if it restarts, and that the mine and its associated activities will be the engine driving all those benefits.  We are now opening a new chapter for Bougainville Copper.  There are many questions, and at BCL we are thinking hard to provide the necessary answers.  I’ll go through a few of the challenges with you now, some of which, like raising three plus billion US dollars, around 10 billion Kina, are common enough in addressing the feasibility of any major resource development, and others which are unique to Bougainville and its recent history.  The first thing that has to be said, particularly in regard to Bougainville but also with relevance to the whole PNG resource development sector: that was then and this is now. It has to be done differently these days.  History tells us that the mine wasn’t opened in the best of circumstances. It was opened on the eve of Papua New Guinea becoming independent. There wasn't a province of Bougainville at the time, constitutionally at least, so neither the province nor the landowners were consulted to any great degree. And there was some resistance to the mine being opened.  All of that will be very different. BCL’s approach is to allow the landowners, in fact encourage the landowners and the Bougainville government to take the lead in setting the agenda. We need to do a better job of sharing the benefits of the project with the landowners and the government. I believe they need to have participation in the project so the fortunes of the mine are also their fortunes.  There will obviously be something of the same employment opportunities which were created before, and the business which spins off the mine. There'll be infrastructure that used to be there, and which is no longer there, like schools and hospitals and safe, reticulated water, all the things which people expect when big projects are developed in their area.  I am asked about the residual resentment, even militancy, which exists in pockets on the island, and what threat this poses to a re-established presence by the company.  My answer is that I don't think any major infrastructure project whether it be mining or otherwise, or even a road in Sydney, for example, opens without some people objecting to it, perhaps not quite so actively.  It’s always a balance between the economic gain and the benefits people get from major projects and the social disruption that is inevitable. Things will change; there is no doubt  Page 3  when you have a large project like this. And some people are resistant to change. They may want the status quo to go on forever.  My view is that everybody should be at the table. Together we've got quite a way to go in terms of deciding whether mining should resume, and working out the regime under which the mine would re-open. With all interested parties round the table, hopefully we’ll be able to reach a workable compromise.  Economic self-sufficiency is an important goal for Bougainville, particularly when its people are endeavouring to become highly autonomous within PNG, and also to address the question of independence, which requires revenue developed by major projects such as a re-opened Panguna.  In addition to that, I think that many people, particularly the older generation, look back on what they had when the mine was operating and would like to see a return of many of the services and opportunities that were lost when mining stopped.  Another crucial issue is the re-negotiation of the Bougainville Copper Agreement, which was a document agreed in a different era with little recognition of benefit sharing.  It was also supposed to have been reviewed every seven years, and that never happened after 1974. Without wishing to pre-empt the discussion process or its outcomes, I know that everyone in Papua New Guinea today with an inkling of modern benefit sharing principles, would expect a range of things to be on the table, but they also need to be realistic about what is achievable.  There’s another suggestion that is doing the rounds, invoking not elephants but dragons, and that is the suggestion that the Chinese would like to invest in, or be a customer, of the Panguna mine.  There has been no direct approach to BCL by the Chinese, but if any party was interested in investing, then the company would have to look at their proposal.  However, it is the owners of the company who will have the final say.  One other observation which is germane to most large investments... in recent times there have been a number of smaller operators circling around (we are moving on from elephants to sharks now), promising much and delivering little. I think it is fair to say that this has been disappointing to many Bougainvilleans, who might have had their expectations raised. BCL did deliver on its promises and will continue to do so.  Page 4  So we are in the position of looking forward with a 21st Century view of equity and benefits sharing, but also with the advantage of hindsight about Bougainvillean resentment of some elements of the agreement imposed on them in the late 1960’s.  Something of the same could be said about the environmental regime which will need to apply at a re-started Panguna mine.  Let me say that there has been a lot of misinformation about the Jaba river and the so- called environmental damage.  Siltation, yes, and river bed aggradation. But there was not the toxic material that some opponents of reopening claim. It needs to be remembered that gold and copper were not produced at the mine; only a concentrate, so chemicals including cyanide were not needed or used.  Today we will look at all the best available tailings disposal mechanisms. Technology has moved on so we now have options we didn't have before.  Landowners and the government are going to have to have a significant input on all major questions, and they'll have to decide which method they want.  In terms of compensation, there are questions that require resolution. During the years of operation, the largest component of compensation was paid by way of royalty directly to the PNG government. This was a bone of contention locally and royalties were later paid back to the provincial government, which in turn, paid the landowners part of it. There were variations of the royalty split on Bougainville, and other rents and compensation, but of course nothing has been paid since the year mining stopped.  So there's a question of what is equitable for compensating for the period between mining being suspended and when it starts again. As part of the re-negotiation, we'll have to look at all that and look at what sort of regime is appropriate for the future, not what happened in the past.  One or two other considerations, just in case anyone believes a re-start after twenty years is any easier than a green field project.  Economic impacts have yet to be modelled, but there are some baseline indicators.  Firstly, the context has changed. The LNG projects are very large, and for PNG the importance Panguna had when it first opened, remembering that it was the only major project in the whole country, not just Bougainville, doesn’t assume the same significance.  For Bougainville, of course it is crucial.  Page 5  Panguna is large enough to provide significant support for the Bougainville economy, and also to generate the large number of jobs and businesses that are expected to develop around a major project. There are statistics that indicate how many direct employees might lead to how many indirect employees and the ratio is about 5 to 1, so if we are employing 1000 people, you might expect another 5,000 people to be employed locally. That's the sort of thing that will help, not only in terms of revenue, but also in employment, which is very important for the young generation.  So, there’s a big load of things to be dealt with.  How long is it going to take us?  Despite what we have said about what we know about our project, so much water has flowed down the rivers since 1989 that it is almost like starting all over.  Permitting will be the most defining influence on feasibility. There will be a new regulatory regime. Bougainville itself will be administering the mining regime, rather than the national government.  It has established its own mining department, whose CEO is present at this meeting.  But none of the legislation is in place yet, so that’s going to take time. It is an opportunity to put in place an international best practice mining regime, based on PNG experience, and with input from parties such as the World Bank.  The company itself will have to do a feasibility study that is acceptable to lenders. That typically takes about a year and it's a very expensive process so we don't want to commit to that until we know what the new mining regime will look like; what the tax regime will be, what the royalty regime will be, compensation and so on. We need to have all those in place before we can do a feasibility study. BCL will also want to adopt “international best practice” and ensure that it meets not just the locally mandated requirements but standards that would be acceptable anywhere in the world and that expert independent agencies agree have been achieved.  So whilst the time frame might be around the 3 to 5 year mark, when we get started on it is a question I can't answer yet because I am not the only one involved in the decision making process. There are all the other stakeholders... the landowners, the Bougainville government and the national government to be considered.  It would be helpful if we can formally start the negotiation process this year, and I do think that is feasible, and indeed perhaps even likely, because the reconciliation process on  Page 6  Bougainville generally is going very well. Panguna landowners have agreed on a process to elect their representatives. I know President Momis is hopeful that this can progress quickly.  Time has slipped a little bit but we are moving in the right direction and we are certainly moving a lot faster than has occurred in the past.  I don’t think anyone of us thinks it was meant to be easy, this business of catching elephants, in Papua New Guinea. But we are certainly up for the challenge.  And in conclusion, I guess the question that could be asked of any developer of a major resource project here in PNG; why, when the challenges seem so many and so difficult?  Well...in general, the properties and projects are world class, the fiscal regime is more attractive than in many other places, we have a stable democracy, without the turmoil of places like Africa and the Middle East. This is a better place to invest your time and your money than many others. The problems can seem insurmountable at times, but no major project can be realised without effort. Progress is achieved in Papua New Guinea, and the rewards are tangible. The LNG projects are a significant gesture of confidence in all of these factors, which is matched by the boom in investment by the non-resource sector....the joint is jumping.  It is hoped that Government will use the windfall of massive investment to improve the lives and the prospects of all Papua New Guineans, because successful business depends on a successful nation.  It’s about schools and hospitals and roads and bridges and jobs, but it’s also about the modernisation of the Papua New Guinean economy, getting ahead of issues like excessive and constant demands for compensation, clan jealousies, and insecurity of land title and tenure.  Finally, please let me remind you that we live and work in a country full of enterprising people. The rewards for effort are here, the prospects for the future are excellent, but there is still a lot of work ahead, for all of us.  Thank you.

 

1335 Postings, 6506 Tage Traderevil@macouba: hoch interessant und sehr informativ **

 
  
    #13393
27.10.12 13:40

145 Postings, 6451 Tage p2205McCully to visit Papua New Guinea

 
  
    #13394
28.10.12 08:20

http://www.voxy.co.nz/politics/mccully-visit-papua-new-guinea/5/138954

Sunday, 28 October, 2012 - 14:09

Foreign Affairs Minister Murray McCully will travel to Papua New  Guinea today to meet members of the new government, including Prime  Minister Peter O'Neill and Foreign Minister Rimbink Pato.

The meetings will include discussions on Asia-Pacific regional  issues, trade and investment links, aid, and political and economic  developments in Papua New Guinea and Bougainville.

Following the meetings in Port Moresby, Mr McCully will travel to the  Highlands region with Mr Pato for a first-hand look at economic  development, agriculture and energy opportunities.

"This visit comes at an important juncture in the relationship between Papua New Guinea and New Zealand," Mr McCully says.

"I will be meeting with a new PNG government, formed after elections  in July for which New Zealand provided vital logistical support."

Mr McCully will be accompanied by a small business delegation.

 

795 Postings, 6099 Tage upholmZeitlinie anhand eines akt. Beispiels

 
  
    #13395
28.10.12 09:00
Läßt sich zwar nicht 100 prozentig mit BOC vergleichen, zeigt aber wie schnell es auch gehen kann wenn alle Ampeln auf grün stehen.


Landowners back Mt Kare mining project
Source:
The National, Friday 26th October, 2012
By MALUM NALU
PRINCIPAL landowners at the Mt Kare gold-silver resource on the border of Enga and Hela have thrown their support behind project developer Summit Development Ltd, which is wholly owned by ASX-listed company Indochine.
Andrias Aiyange, chairman of Mt Kare Trustee Co Ltd, umbrella company of Mt Kare Huli/Paiela landowners, and Sir Matiabe Yuwi, announced their support yesterday.
A pre-feasibility study was completed on the project last month, with positive outcome, leading to the beginning of the project’s feasibility study.
Mt Kare has the potential to catapult the company into production status within three years.
Importantly, the deposit is located 15km from the world-class Porgera gold mine and has a similar geological setting and mineralisation pattern, suggesting its potential to substantially increase the contained gold resource.
“We are in support of Summit Development following the pre-feasibility study, and want them to continue with the bankable feasibility study,” Aiyange told The National yesterday.
“Therefore, we appeal to the national government to renew the exploration licence 1093 to allow for open-cut hard-rock mining to begin in 2015,
“Over the past 20 years, since the Mt Kare gold rush of the 1980s, our people have suffered and there have been all kinds of law-and-order problems, therefore, we support Summit Development to go ahead with development.”
Sir Matiabe acknowledged the management of Summit Development, led by Fijian George Niumataiwalu for working closely with the people.
“For the company to work alongside the landowners marks the dawning of a new era in the PNG mining sector,” he said.
Indochine holds 100% of the 1.8-million ounce Mt Kare gold/silver resource through its wholly-owned PNG subsidiary Summit Development.
The deposit lies 15km from the giant Porgera gold mine which contains 28moz of gold (including a total of 17moz of gold mined to date).
Porgera has been producing gold for 21 years and currently produces about 500,000oz of gold per year, at an average grade of 3.2 g/t.




http://www.thenational.com.pg/?q=node/40294  

15644 Postings, 6507 Tage nekro#13394

 
  
    #13396
28.10.12 13:53
Mit NZ,AU,UNO,WB,AGB,RIO u. Landowners die hinter der Wiedereröffnung der Pangunamine stehen u. Druck machen dürfte es PNG/O`Neill äusserst schwer fallen sich dagegen zu stellen, zumal O`Neill schon offiziell seine Unterstützung zugesagt u. auch schon erste Schritte umgesetzt hat.

Wait & See ;-)))))))))))))))

14618 Postings, 4586 Tage willi-marlfür mich nach studium eines teiles

 
  
    #13397
1
28.10.12 14:10
der von dir nekro mal geposteten infos ist nun klar,
dass ich noch ein paar bocs einfahren werde.
ob zur liste ab 100k reichen wird, weiss ich noch nicht.
werde es von zeit zu zeit aufstocken. time-average......
denke aber, dass, wenn die zeit reif ist, der wert sehr gute
aussichten hat. liegt schliesslich genug an metall-atomen
in der zone dort. können und kommen ja nicht weg......  

1025 Postings, 4828 Tage antares0650willi-marl

 
  
    #13398
28.10.12 15:40
ab 40 k bist du unter den Topp-100.
und der Satz ist ein Hammer:

.....metall-atome.....können ja nicht weg....
Hoffentlich zieht nicht einer den Badewannenstoppel aus der Insel und sie säuft ab....  

14618 Postings, 4586 Tage willi-marlantares0650

 
  
    #13399
28.10.12 16:44
soweit ich mich an meine geologie-vorlesungen und seminare erinnere,
ist das dort eher nicht zu befürchten. was anderes wäre ein vulkanausbruch.
auf den wartet die usa auch schon ein wenig im yellowstone und wird wohl
die nächsten 50 jahre nicht kommen. und da unten auch nicht......
also vernünftiges konzept mit gerechter verteilung und umweltschutz
so weit wie möglich auf den tisch und wir gehen einer ertragreichen
zukunft entgegen. nur zeit wird man noch mitbringen müssen......  

1335 Postings, 6506 Tage Traderevil...auf HC...

 
  
    #13400
28.10.12 19:03
..auf  HC :http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1860069&msgid=10851154

fehlen nur noch 4 x click

und auf : http://hotcopper.com.au/...p?fid=1&tid=1861112&msgid=10857463

nur noch 6 x click

für einen schönen informativen Wochenanfang im Aussiland

nach dem Motto ´ yes we can step by step´  oder aber ``...immer am Ball bleiben`` ;D)))))))  

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