Trading Bougainville Copper (ADRs) 867948
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09.02.13 12:25 #14438
http://www.ariva.de/forum/...ADRs-867948-304728?page=577#jumppos14438
das nennt man auch verzweifelte aussteiger
antares0650 #19000
geduld ??? 01.10.2007 Perf. seit Threadbeginn: -66,67%
kommst du mit geduld?
CFC hat zumindestens noch eine zukunft
und BOC?
hier werden einige noch vorher in die rente gehen
bevor ein gramm gold rauskommt
servus falke2
....wenn man die Frage: warum gibt der Kurs bei dieser Nachrichtenlage nach?
durch die Frage: wem würde ein hoher Kurs zum jetzigen Zeitpunkt nützen? ersetzt
ist die Beantwortung sehr schwierig wenn nicht gar unmöglich.
Für einen niedrigen Kurs könnte z. Bsp. eine Übertragung des 19,3% igen Paketes, Begierden durch die `gelbe Gefahr`, Trader an der ASX die ihr eigenes
(wahrscheinlich auch idiologisches) Süppchen kochen usw. usw. usw., sprechen.
Auf jeden Fall mehr Gründe als für einen steigenden Kurs. ;-))))))
bist schon lange drin aber
die chance über 0,50 auszusteigen
und jetzt günstiger einzusammeln
war auch da
mußt auch mal fehler einsehen boc zeigt im augenblick
richtung erdloch sorry für dich
servus falke2
BY JENNIFER NKUI
The ABG minister responsible for Natural Resources and Energy Michael Oni has revealed that his department has now nearly completed the long term Bougainville Mining Act and regulations that will replace the Bougainville Mining Transitional Arrangement Act passed in August this year.
When giving his ministerial statement during the September parliament seating, he explained that the long term mining law is the complete package in the transfer of powers to the Autonomous Bougainville Government.
He said the long term law consists of the Bougainville Mining Policies, Acts and regulations.
He added that a final draft was endorsed by the cabinet for consultation and then final approval.
The permanent Act captures the important issues not addressed in the Papua New Guinea Mining Act or the Transitional Act and these issues are the result of lessons learnt from our Panguna Crisis and some modern approaches in mining today.
These are royalties and equity participation, community and regional development projects, offshore mining, mine closure and rehabilitation, resettlement, mine waste management, employment, training and local procurement opportunities, tendering and small scale mining.
Minister Oni said the most important concepts the permanent Act will capture are equity participation by landowners, royalty to landowners and the ABG.
He then asked his member colleagues for their support to enable his department to complete the permanent Bougainville Mining Act and regulations by November this year and have it presented, debated and hopefully passed by the house in December this year or March next year.
He added that this then can enable the ABG to lift the moratorium and open up exploration mining in selected areas in Bougainville.
230914MINING BILL NOT FOR PANGUNA ONLY
BY JENNIFER NKUI
Member for Tsitalato constituency Cosmas Sohia wants the members for Central Bougainville to inform their people that the Transitional Mining Bill is not passed for Panguna Mine only saying the bill was passed for mining on Bougainville.
When responding to the ministerial statement made by the minister for Natural Resources and Energy Michael Oni during the September seating, he stressed that the final draft for the permanent long term mining bill should not be rushed.
He then urged the members, especially from central Bougainville to go with the Bill to their people and explain to them the bill first.
He said this all depends on awareness before the final draft is made.
Mr. Sohia said the people must be made aware of the bill so they can contribute their thoughts and ideas then the bill can be passed.
He added that when something is passed, the members must play their part by explaining to their people about the development taking place so we will not face any problems or accusations.
Bodenbildung abwarten
Verhandeln darf...
230914ONI GIVES UPDATE ON HIS DEPARTMENT
BY JENNIFER NKUI
The department of mining has now reached a very important chapter in its capacity building process whereby the department has evolved from the formation of a division with a chief executive officer and a minister in 2006 to having a fully functional mining department with a secretary, support staff and capacity to implement powers and functions transferred from the National Government to the ABG by the enactment of the Transitional Act.
This was revealed by the ABG minister for Natural Resources and Energy Michael Oni in his ministerial statement during the September parliament seating.
As the mining minister he happily announced that his department is now empowered and independent with its own mining law as a result of the enactment and passing of the Bougainville Transitional Mining Act.
He said this signifies that Bougainville alone has the authority to make approvals on mine related activities and matters on Bougainville.
He then thanked the ABG president chief Dr. John Momis, his vice president and the BEC members for issuing instructions in 2013 to officers and lawyers to fast track the development of the Bougainville Mining Transitional Bill.
He added that though the Bougainville Mining Transitional Arrangement Act took almost two and a half years to develop and which created a lot of debates, it was a worldwide exercise undertaken and credit must go to all those who contributed one way or another for ABG to finally have its own mining laws.
Mr. Oni said the development of the Transitional Act also helped the ABG address numerous sensitive issues which so many are scared and skeptical of even considering.
Prominent of these issues are mineral ownership by customary landowners, having a greater say of participation, exploration, mining development consultations which was never the case before and the very sensitive Bougainville Copper Agreement.
In consideration of many Bougainvilleans regarding BCL, the ABG was also very bold in stripping BCL of all its exploration tenements and other associated leases and down grading of its SML to its exploration license where they could start to conduct feasibility studies and negotiate from to apply and qualify for a mining lease under our own mining laws.
http://www.businessadvantagepng.com/...unning-reopening-panguna-mine/
Please open the mine
..auffällig ist lediglich ein verschieben auf der (x) AUD Achse. Keine Kreativität. Na ja es wird wohl immer mit dem selben Programm gearbeitet. ;-)))))
§
Momis makes a predictable attack on ‘Voices of Bougainville’ report
by ramunickel
Bougainville President John Momis has come out swinging against a report which reveals deep seated opposition to the reopening of the Panguna mine - and predictably his attack ignores the main findings, misrepresents that basic thesis, is bombastic, and castigates opponents as meddling 'activists'...
report cover
Bougainville President Momis attacks report on Panguna mine
Post Courier
Bougainville President John Momis has attacked a report on the decommissioned Panguna mine, describing it "misleading and irresponsible".
The report by Jubilee Australia will be launched in Sydney tomorrow and tabled in the Australian parliament in Canberra on Friday by the Australian Greens Party leader Christine Milne.
Momis said the report was "factually inaccurate, biased and methodologically unsound".
He said it was "dishonest in claiming that interviews with 65 individuals selected by its authors from the 10,000 or so people in the affected areas allows it to represent the voices of them and the 300,000 people of Bougainville".
The report claims the voices of mine-affected communities "have been distant from recent public discussion" about the possible reopening of the Panguna and was critical of Bougainville government consultations with landowner which Jubilee suggested had largely excluded communities around the mine.
“Far from being excluded, affected landowners have been at the centre of all discussions regarding Panguna since they commenced in 2009,” Momis said.
ramunickel | September 24, 2014 at 12:06 pm | Tags: ABG, Bougainville, Environmental damage, Human rights, John Momis, Jubilee Australia, Landholders, Panguna, Papua New Guinea, PNG development, Rio Tinto | Categories: Environmental impact, Human rights, Papua New Guinea | URL: http://wp.me/pMvf7-3Im
Cui bono Liquidation? zumindest nicht RT, denn als einer der global größten Kupfer Produzenten ist RT zumindest daran interessiert, daß kein Wettbewerber die Produktion OHNE Zahlung an RT übernimmt - und da im Fall der Kompensation-losen Übernahme RT den Wettbewerber mit Klagen überzieht - passiert das mit hoher Sicherheit nicht.
Cui bono Verkauf? Ein Verkauf OHNE Kompensation für die Altaktionäre ist Unrealistisch.
Cui bono Kursrutsch? Der Kursrutsch nutzt z.B. den Aktionären, die damit steuerliche Verluste realisieren.
Also: wer in BOC Aktien tradet - wird die Kurse jetzt möglicherweise nutzen. Wer langfristig investiert ist und nicht tradet, schaue halt nur alle paar Monate 'mal zum Kurs.
Bis nächstes Jahr+weniger Nervosität.
Würden lautere Absichten dahinterstecken, so wäre der 1 Schritt gewesen mit dem ABG Kontakt aufzunehmen.
Momis hat ganz Recht diesen Report als nicht repräsentativ zu kritisieren.
Zwischen den Zeilen sollte man also schon lesen (können)
240914 PRESIDENT RESPONDS TO JUBILEE
Jubilee Australia Report ‘Irresponsible’: Bougainville President
The President of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville (ABG), the Honourable Chief John Momis, has attacked a recent Jubilee Australia report on Bougainville’s Panguna mine, describing it as misleading and irresponsible.
The mine, operated by Bougainville Copper Ltd (53 per cent owned by Rio Tino) at Panguna, in Bougainville, from 1972 to 1989, when it was closed by violent conflict. It has not reopened since.
The Report has been released by Jubilee (www.jubileeaustralia.org/page/resources) and will be launched at public functions in Sydney on Thursday 25 September and in Parliament House in Canberra by Christine Milne, Leader of the Greens, on Friday 26th.
The President said: ‘The Report is factually inaccurate, biased, methodologically unsound, and dishonest in claiming that interviews with 65 individuals selected by its authors from the 10,000 or so people in the affected areas allows it to represent the voices of them and the 300,000 people of Bougainville.’
The Jubilee Report claims that the voices of mine-affected communities ‘have been distant from recent public discussion’ about the possible reopening of the Panguna, closed since 1989 as a result of the Bougainville conflict. The Report is critical of ABG consultation with landowners which Jubilee suggests have largely excluded communities around the mine.
‘Far from being excluded, affected landowners have been at the centre of all discussions regarding Panguna since they commenced in 2009’, said President Momis.
‘There may indeed be individuals who have not been able to, or have chosen not to, participate in consultations. In part this reflects the ABG’s extremely limited resources, and the real barriers of geography and politics that we face, including an armed dissident road block which has restricted access to the Panguna area for 17 years.
‘But the ABG and representative landowner associations have gone to great lengths to overcome these barriers, undertaking numerous consultations at village and regional levels and with all major Bougainvillean stakeholders.
‘The overwhelming response is support for reopening the mine, but only if it can be done in a way that avoids the extremely negative effects of earlier mining and ensures that Bougainvilleans receive a fair share of mining’s benefits’, said President Momis.
‘But’, he said, ‘all the 65 individuals selected by Jubilee for interview are reported to be against reopening the mine. Such an outcome does not seem credible unless the researchers interviewed only people that they knew opposed mining.’
Jubilee statements to the press go further, claiming ‘near unanimity among the Pangunans that they do not want mining’. President Momis said: ‘This being an area where mining caused great harm, there are individuals and some communities who oppose mining. But nothing in Jubilee’s Report substantiates this gross overgeneralization and misrepresentation’.
President Momis refuted Jubilee’s allegations that the ABG has ‘initiated a campaign to reopen the Panguna mine’. He said: ‘If the strict conditions sought by the landowners and the ABG cannot be satisfied, the ABG will not allow the mine to be reopened’.
The President has today written to the Board of Jubilee Australia (letter attached) saying: ‘The Jubilee Report is deeply flawed. Jubilee Australia’s Board bears responsibility for allowing such a misleading and irresponsible document to be released, and for limiting and redressing the damage it can cause.’
Chief John L. Momis President Autonomous Region of Bougainville 24 September 2014
§
Momis reacts to claims on reopening Panguna mine
by ramunickel
panguna mine pit
Troy Taule | PNG Loop
President of the Autonomous Region of Bougainville, Dr John Momis has refuted allegations that the government has started a campaign to reopen the Panguna mine.
Momis was responding to the Jubilee Australia report titled Voices of Bougainville released recently.
In a letter written this week to the board of Jubilee Australia, Momis said that what the ABG ‘initiated’ back in 2009 was an extensive Bougainville-wide consultation exercise.
“We began with Panguna-affected landowners, later widening to include all major components of Bougainville society.
“From the outset our goal has been to establish whether or not Bougainvilleans wanted to consider reopening Panguna and, if so, under what conditions,” said Momis.
He said that if the strict conditions sought by the landowners and the Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG) could not be satisfied, then the ABG will not allow the mine to be reopened.
“The overwhelming response from these consultations is that Bougainvilleans do not favour reopening the mine on the same basis as it originally operated.
“But the vast majority of those consulted do favour reopening the mine if it can be done in a way that avoids the past environmental and social impacts and conflict it engendered, and if Bougainvilleans can share fully and fairly in the economic benefits mining can generate,” said Momis.
ramunickel | September 25, 2014 at 2:02 pm | Tags: ABG, Bougainville, Environmental damage, Human rights, John Momis, Jubilee Australia, Landholders, Panguna, Papua New Guinea, Rio Tinto | Categories: Environmental impact, Financial returns, Human rights, Papua New Guinea | URL: http://wp.me/pMvf7-3IC