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Showing posts with label PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 12, 2015

PNG opposition says LNG money handled corruptly

Updated at 5:31 pm today
The leader of the Papua New Guinea Opposition, Don Polye, has accused the Peter O'Neill Government of corruption over the way it handles LNG project money.
The huge liquified natural gas project is now the biggest earner in PNG and has been touted for several years as the economic saviour of the country.
Papua New Guinea Opposition Leader, Don Polye
Mr Polye says a huge UBS Bank loan by the Government to buy a slice of Oil Search was not done through Parliament as it should have been.
And he says the O'Neill Government is not channelling the earnings from the project through the public accounts, but through an entity it has created, called the National Petroleum Company PNG or NPCP.

"And funds are channelled there, repaying the loan, as well as being managed in a very untransparent manner, and that is the cry out by the people of this nation, especially by academia, the professional institutions and other bodies at present in Papua New Guinea."

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Topics:   Papua New Guinea
Next story in Pacific: Tuvalu launches national youth policy
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Posted by Kandep Home Admin at Wednesday, August 12, 2015 No comments:
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Labels: PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News
Location: Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea

Saturday, August 8, 2015

Government finances threatened as drought shuts Ok Tedi mine



August 7, 2015 7:00 pm JST
Papua New Guinea
Government finances threatened as drought shuts Ok Tedi mine
MICHAEL FIELD, Contributing writer
Papua New Guinea's largest copper miner, Ok Tedi, has halted operations for the rest of the year due to a prolonged dry spell.
AUCKLAND, New Zealand -- A harsh dry season and plunging commodity prices have forced Papua New Guinea's biggest copper miner to suspend operations, adding to fears of an impending fiscal crisis for the government. State-owned Ok Tedi Mining produces 25% of the country's export revenue, 5.5% of its gross domestic product and about a quarter of government revenue. "There will be a direct hit on the national budget," mining commentator Martyn Namorong told the Nikkei Asian Review.
Compounding the potential impact of the shutdown, a $19 billion liquefied natural gas complex being constructed by ExxonMobil, the U.S. energy group, is not producing the cash flow Papua New Guinea had expected, because of low energy prices
In its Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook, released on Aug. 3, the government said its estimated budget deficit for 2015 had risen from 4.4% of GDP to 9.4%, which would be the highest in the country's history. Also, the level of public debt is forecast to rise sharply from an earlier estimate of 27.8% of GDP to 41.3%. Both forecasts are higher than comparable levels in the late 1990s, when the country suffered a severe economic crisis.
The government had already reduced its official forecast for GDP growth to 11.3% from 15% for 2015 to reflect lower global energy and commodity prices. However, the Asian Development Bank said in July, before news of the shutdown of Ok Tedi, that growth was likely to slow dramatically. "[The] consensus forecast sees growth further moderating in 2016 (to 5%)," the ADB said.
Ok Tedi announced in late July that it would close for the rest of the year as a "result of the dry weather event," a reference to the drought caused by El Nino -- an intermittent change in Pacific Ocean currents that can cause weather disruptions. The mine suffered the same fate for six months in 1997 (also an El Nino year) under its former Australian owner BHP, now BHP Billiton.
High in the normally rain-soaked Star Mountains, 15km east of the border with Indonesia that bisects the island of New Guinea, Ok Tedi depends on the 1,050km Fly River to move ore out and bring in supplies. Declining water levels in the river were "creating uncertainty with regard to cash inflows necessary to sustain operation," Ok Tedi said.
The company said there was a 20% chance that rainfall would return to normal within the next six months. But Namorong said Ok Tedi has insufficient credit to remain operating while unable to export its concentrate. "If it is not making cash, it cannot operate," he said.
The miner has begun cutting its workforce of 2,245 employees. Work being carried out by thousands of contractors has also been halted, and more than 2,000 children of employees have had to find new schooling. Small landowners and 50,000 people in 120 settlements along the Fly who receive compensation for mine pollution are also affected. Prime Minister Paul O'Neill said in January that a permanent closure would have "horrendous" economic consequences.
Ok Tedi's first-quarter results, published May 4, show that copper and gold production decreased 18% and 26%, respectively, on the year, while the price of copper fell 16% and gold 8%. Gross revenue fell 58% to 291 million kina ($105 million), and the mine posted a loss of 38 million kina, compared with a profit of 280 million kina a year earlier.
Namorong said the plunge in copper prices, which are at a nearly six-year low, has pushed Ok Tedi's revenues below the break-even point. At the end of July, the global market price of copper was $2.40 a pound. Namorong said the company needs a price of between $3 a pound and $3.50 a pound to be viable.
Always controversial Ok Tedi is Papua New Guinea's oldest operating mine and has always been controversial. In the 1980s, BHP attracted substantial international environmental criticism after mine tailings were found to be damaging the Fly River system.
In 2002, BHP Billiton abandoned the site after years of controversy. In return for indemnity against lawsuits for environmental damage, the company handed over its shares, now worth $1.4 billion, to a trust dedicated to local development.
Sean Dorney, an expert on Papua New Guinea at Australia's Lowy Institute for International Policy, a think tank, said the country's then-Prime Minister Mekere Morauta believed that BHP wanted to close the mine. "Ok Tedi kept operating and has been significantly profitable," Dorney said.
When he came to power in 2012, O'Neill claimed the trust was secretly controlled by BHP. The following year, Ok Tedi was nationalized. A legal battle is under way for control of the trust, which is registered in Singapore. In May, the International Center for the Settlement of Investment Disputes declined to hear the trust's claims against the government. A similar legal case is before the High Court of Singapore, which has yet to issue a judgment.
In March, the government appointed Peter Graham, the former head of ExxonMobil's PNG gas project, as Ok Tedi's chief executive, with a brief to refocus the mine on profitable operations in a world of lower-price commodities.
However, this has been stymied by the rainfall problem. "Even Peter Graham can't control the weather," said Dorney. "The O'Neill government has spent up big anticipating huge revenue flows from LNG, but that is not happening, so the Ok Tedi temporary closure is a real problem."
Mining dominates the economic life of Papua New Guinea's 7.3 million people. In July, Enga Province, home to the country's richest resource project, the Porgera gold mine, was declared a tribal fighting zone, affecting mining operations. Porgera is 95% owned by Barrack Gold of Canada, with the Papua New Guinea government owning the rest.
The Lihir gold mine in New Ireland, 900km northeast of Port Moresby, the capital, is struggling. UBS analysts told the Australian Financial Review in July that the mine's owners, Melbourne-based Newcrest Mining, could be gearing up for a write-down of 2.5 billion Australian dollars ($1.8 billion) following lower returns.
China Metallurgical Group, a Chinese state-owned company, is building the Ramu nickel and cobalt mine on the northern coast at Madang. However, the project is opposed by locals due to pollution fears and anger about the use of workers sent in from China.
Trouble abroad, too Indonesia, the Solomon Islands, New Caledonia and Fiji are also suffering mining headaches as a result of the decline in commodities prices, which has tracked falling demand in China's slowing economy.
In Indonesia, the Grasberg copper and gold mine, 500km west of Ok Tedi's mine, is in a dispute with Jakarta over plans by its owner, U.S.-based Freeport McMoRan, to export 575,000 tons of copper concentrate. Indonesia has banned raw copper exports and demands the construction of local smelting facilities instead.
In the Solomon Islands, the Gold Ridge mine on Guadalcanal closed two years ago after flooding. The mine's Australian owners sold it for A$100 to a local group. But the government last month declared Gold Ridge a disaster area, saying that a toxic tailings dam could burst and pollute the area's palm oil-rich plains and lagoon.
Slumping demand has seen investments in bauxite mining in Fiji come largely to an end. Tens of thousands of metric tons of the mineral are being stockpiled, promoting a parliamentary investigation in the wake of landowner complaints.
Prospects are improving in French-run New Caledonia, where nickel mining has been plagued by environmental concerns and land protests. The Brazilian-owned Vale New Caledonia mine is moving into profit, although it continues to suffer extensive vandalism linked to a local independence movement.
Related stories
Praying for rain: Grappling with a bigger, badder El Nino
Peter O'Neill interview: Papua New Guinea leader keen to keep building LNG industry
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Posted by Kandep Home Admin at Saturday, August 08, 2015 No comments:
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Labels: National Economy, PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News
Location: Tabubil, Papua New Guinea

Thursday, July 30, 2015

Writing was on wall for Ok Tedi mine

Source:The National, Thursday July 30th, 2015

JUST over 18 months after Prime Minister Peter O’Neill announced the 100% takeover and ownership of the giant ok Tedi mine by the PNG Government, OTML announces a temporary shutdown of operations.
One wonders whether the environment and the market conditions really had anything to do with this temporary closure.
We are told that more than 300 national employees will be made redundant. Another 1, 500 will be stood-down and more than 5, 000 contractor employees will either be stood down or also made redundant. This exercise affects more than 6,800 employees involved in the Ok Tedi mine.
Within the corridors of OTML headquarters, in the work places, streets and outskirts of Tabubil, it is too common a story that there are chronic underlying issues then the so called “dry weather” and “low metal prices” window dresser pictures being painted to the rest of the country.
Its roots go back to the Government’s takeover of the mine from. Through poor strategic planning, imprudent and mismanagement of OTML, the once great company was laid bare for the taking.
The signs were already there by early fourth quarter 2014 - Ok Tedi was struggling to keep afloat.
At the changing of the guards in December 2014 the company barely survived. The signs were there again in March 2015.
Through prudent management by a new national executive the reserves obtained were able to get Ok Tedi through to June and July of 2015.
At the questionable changing of the guards again by the government in May 2015, it was only a matter of time before things fell apart-this time for the worst. The dry weather was the perfect excuse. Now the results are evident.
It is quite disturbing recalling the events of the past 24 months, under the previous senior management’s leadership:
How decisions were made and approved to finance so-called Mine Life Extension projects like: the Parker donggas, the Rubber Crumb Plant, the Crusher and Batch Plant, the Motor Rewind Shop, the country club construction, the DIWAI Hospital accommodation and teaching facilities project, the major company redundancy and restructure of 2014, and the ensuing overhaul of work roster change to name a few. I wish I had more space to put the data and figures down to show the startling costs of these projects compared to the actual benefits they have brought in for Ok Tedi while violating its own project management processes which would have prevented such fall outs.
These major spending on so-called Mine Life Extension Projects were not for the Ok Tedi Mill Operations and Mine Production, the business units which make money for Ok Tedi.
These major capital investments had no direct benefits to Ok Tedi at all. Yet they accounted for about 40% of the capital expenditure budget in 2013 and 2014. What a blunder.
These projects never had any known proper formal technical feasibility study done to ascertain their viability and benefits through competent technical and economic evaluations.
If they were done, certainly there was no technical capacity to evaluate them as the Engineering Services Department, the technical brain of this project, was already dissolved by the OTML Management on the eve of these projects.
Looking back, one thinks whether hard earned revenue was strategically squandered on these major projects since they have had no practical benefit to the company.
It is startling to imagine how the OTML board and the PNG Government scrutinised these projects and major company changes.
Was the Government ill advised? Did the government lack the competence to ask the right questions? Did the government consult the technical details of these projects? If so, were these details reliable?
One thing is for sure, there is nothing to show for the benefits of most of these projects just 24 months on.
The then senior executives and cohorts brought in their cronies who restructured the company to lure in more of their kind and siphon out money from OTML and PNG causing many job losses to PNG nationals during the major company redundancy in 2013.
The 2013 workforce strike was to prevent the redundancy exercise and major company changes because this was foreseen. Neither the government nor the land owner leaders were able to see this coming!
Even though the Prime Minister was given ample evidence and plea by OTML employees, on his visit to Tabubil during the 2013 strike, this far cry fell on deaf ears. No job loss was promised. It is sad to say that this never eventuated.
The company was restructured. Many employees lost their jobs. Systemic Failure commenced. Ok Tedi was set up for this fall.
It is frightening to think that this happened right under the nose of the Government and the local land owner leaders - people who were mandated and entrusted with to look after the national interests of simple people.
Now, after 18 months, the results of that day speak for themselves. And not only the remaining employees of that day but the local community, Western province and PNG will now bear the brunt of the lack of leadership.
Whether the Government then was acting on poor advice or decided to ignore caution. The damage is done.
OTML, once immune to external market forces, environmental conditions and political interference, is suddenly susceptible to “dry weather” and “low metal prices” condition, not to mention the lower than normal quality of gold and copper it is now producing.
Only the OTML management and the PNG Government know the primary reasons why the mine is now going into this shutdown mode.


Abib Maan
Tabubil, Western

______________________________________________________________
Related News Link
Polye Upset Over Ok Tedi Mine Closure
Ok Tedi PNG Copper Mine output stalled by low river level
Papua New Guinea's Ok Tedi Mine Suspends Production, Stands down workforce 
Opposition Leader Upset over Ok Tedi's Move
 
Posted by Kandep Home Admin at Thursday, July 30, 2015 No comments:
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Labels: PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News
Location: Tabubil, Papua New Guinea

PM: Mine shutdown a cost-cutting measure

Source: The National, Thursday July 30th, 2015
PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill says Ok Tedi Mining Ltd’s temporary shutdown is part of necessary cost-cutting measures to address the fall in global prices of copper and ore.
He said it had significantly affected the revenue of OTML.
“Last week, I met with chairman Sir Moi Avei and managing director Peter Graham in relation to this particular matter,” he said.
He said the temporary shutdown of the mine was caused by not being able to export copper because of the inability to transport ore out on the Fly River because of the dry weather.
“As a result, there are no ships going in and out of Ok Tedi, not able to bring food supplies and fuels to keep the power generation and other services going on in mine,” he said.
“This is affecting the ability of the company to maintain services and of course, communities and families in Tabubil. It is a temporary shutdown and they are going to put the mine into care and maintenance.”
He said the company, meanwhile, will “repair some of the assets and machineries, which have been outstanding for quite some time”.
Some local and expatriate employees have been sent home following the company’s announcement last Friday of the temporary shutdown
 
Miner to keep more locals
Source:The National, Thursday July 30th, 2015
 PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill says the Ok Tedi Mining Ltd will keep more local workers to continue working at the mine.
“And those who are not needed will be repatriated back to their destinations until when the river levels come back to normal,” he said.
Telefomin MP Solan Mirisim had asked the Government to send a team to Tabubil to investigate why the OTML management was using the dry weather and low metal prices as an excuse to carry out a massive retrenchment, redundancy and lay-off exercise.
“Employees and their families, contractors and the people of Western, including surrounding areas are currently shocked at the short notice of the temporary shutdown from the management last Friday,” he said.
Mirisim said the notice was effective from Monday.
 
New road to help ore transport
Source:The National, Thursday July 30th, 2015

PRIME Minister Peter O’Neill says a new access road is being built to solve the problem of transporting ore by river at Tabubil, Western, for Ok Tedi Mining Ltd.
“The Government is building a new access road to Aiambak that has much higher level of access in terms of the water levels,” he said.
“Larger boats can take food, fuels and medicine supplies through that area. We will use the new access road in the future to bring ore out of the mine and of course, continue the mine to have a long-term sustainable operation.”
Telefomin MP Solan Mirisim had asked whether the Government had in place a long-term solution to assist OTML. He suggested that the Government build other ports somewhere in Lake Murray or Aiambak or have a road link to the mine
Posted by Kandep Home Admin at Thursday, July 30, 2015 No comments:
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Labels: PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News
Location: Tabubil, Papua New Guinea

Tuesday, July 28, 2015

Mine faces closure

Source: The National, Tuesday July 28th, 2015
By SHEILA MALKEN
 
Managing director and chief executive officer Peter Graham in a memorandum to staff last Friday said the company was taking the step to “address the urgent need to improve our financial performance to ensure long term-term business viability in a low-price environment, and our response to the immediate impacts of dry weather”.
He said copper and gold prices “are at the lowest point for many years”.
“The recent failure of the chasm which has prevented access to higher grade ore has compounded the situation,” Graham said.
He said the dry weather had placed further stress on the company, “preventing shipment of copper concentrate and the generation of revenue, and the limited re-supply of critical stocks of diesel and food”.
The company expects the dry weather to continue for around six months, similar to that experienced in 1997/98 when operations were shut down.
The number of expatriates will be reduced by 30 per cent and nationals by 15 per cent, with some work performed by OTML “may be outsourced”.
“We must prepare for a temporary and orderly shutdown of operations over the next week or so.
“We will continue operations for as long as we can, but the time horizon is short,” he said.
The company has been the largest employer in Western for over 32 years. It did not say yesterday how many workers it had but the 2013 figure indicated it employed 2310 people and 5147 contractors. Most (95 per cent) are PNG nationals and 37.3 per cent from Western.
More than 2000 students attend the three schools in the mining lease area – Diwai International, Tabubil Secondary and Tabubil Primary.
Diwai International School will be closed on Friday.
Principal Kevin McCrae told The National that they were following the information on Graham’s memorandum. The school has 260 students.
“We have only two classes in Grade 9. The Grade 8 students will need to transfer to other schools so that they can sit for the national exam,” he said.
“All students at Diwai International have been given certificates to help them enrol elsewhere. Currently the class is running as normal, but we understand most people will be leaving town next week.
“It is
 
obviously a traumatic experience for students, teachers and parents.
“We are working to make the school closure as smooth and unsettling as possible.”
Tabubil Secondary School has about 1000 students and 29 teachers.
Tabubil Primary School head teacher, identified only as Mrs Na’awi, said she would comment on the situation later this week.
A teacher in Kiunga said four schools which depended on the shipments of fuel from OK Tedi might be forced to close down too.
They are St Gabriel Technical Secondary, Kiunga Secondary, Ningrum High School and Aiambak High School.
The company in a statement said it was coordinating with the Western provincial administration on emergency response planning.
“OTML management is focused on sensitively handling the changes that will impact the workforce and communities and ensuring the mine is positioned for an efficient restart when weather conditions allow, and for long-term business viability.”
 
OK Tedi Mining Limited is preparing for a temporary shutdown of its operations because of the “very challenging business environment” it is facing and the impact of the dry weather. Most employees are to be sent home, and more than 2000 children have been advised to find other schools outside its area of operation in Tabubil, Western.  
Shutdown will hurt
Source:The National, Tuesday July 28th, 2015
THE temporary shutdown of operations announced by Ok Tedi Mining Ltd will affect it, the Ok Tedi Development Foundation says.
OTML yesterday announced a “temporary shutdown” of its operations.
In a statement, the State-owned open-pit copper, gold and silver mining company said the shutdown would be temporary and the
company would continue operations while critical supplies allowed.
The company said the situation resulted from the dry weather that was already significantly impacting it operations.
“River traffic on the Fly River into and out Ok Tedi’s main river port at Kiunga has been unreliable for some weeks due to low water levels,” it said.
“Diesel stocks for power generation and mining operations cannot be sustained, and replenishment of food stocks is affected.
“Transport of copper concentrate product to Port Moresby for on-shipment has been unreliable, creating uncertainty with regard to cash inflows necessary to sustain operation.
“Further the low river flow impacts operation of the Ok Menga power station, which is the main source of power for Tabubil and the OTML operations.
“As a result power rationing has commenced in Tabubil and Kiunga,” OTML said. When contacted yesterday, foundation media and communications officer Domininc Krau confirmed certain operational restrictions had been put in place for the foundation.
“Yes this affects OTDF in that certain operational restrictions have been put in place by chief executive officer Ian Middleton,” it said.
“Of note are restrictions on light vehicle usage and fuel/petrol usage and that all consultants and contractors engaged by OTDF are to leave the site.
“As for reduction of employee numbers at OTDF, there will be a reduction, however this will be planned in accordance with an organisation restructure.
“Further restrictions will depend on the weather, commodity prices and OTML management decisions however, we will continue to maintain contact with our CMCA community partners.”
The foundation manages community development benefits from Ok Tedi mine operations on behalf of the 100,000 river residents living in 156 villages throughout Western.
Posted by Kandep Home Admin at Tuesday, July 28, 2015 No comments:
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Labels: National Economy, PNG Mining;Oil&Gas News
Location: Tabubil, Papua New Guinea
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Disclaimer

All articles and information published on this blog are from the views and opinions of the author. Where appropriate, sources have been coded clearly after the title of each post for news and extracts that have been extracted from other sources like "The National, Post Courier, PNG blogs, Malum Nalu blog etc." For further information and details, original copies etc. leave a comment in comment section and or contact the administrator by email kandepian2011@gmail.com. The author wishes all blog visitors Happy Reading!!



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