India Invites Australia Firms to Partner in Developing Mining Sector (The New Indian Express – September 1, 2015)

http://www.newindianexpress.com/

NEW DELHI: Steel and Mines Minister Narendra Singh Tomar today invited Australian companies to partner with their Indian counterparts to develop the domestic mining and exploration sector.

Tomar in his inaugural address at the Asia Pacific International Mining Exhibition (AIMEX) 2015 in Sydney today said that India and Australia can forge mutually beneficial relationships, an official statement said.

The Minister is leading a delegation, comprising heads of mining organisations and ministry officials to AIMEX 2015 — the world’s largest mining exhibition, it added.

“The total trade between India and Australia in 2013-14 was to the tune of 15 billion Australian dollars. We are hopeful that by forging mutually beneficial alliances, India will go on to feature in the top ten trade partners of Australia,” the statement quoted the Minister as saying.

India Day event was organised at the four-day exhibition with the objective of inviting proactive partnership of miners and explorers from across the world in the Indian mining industry, the statement said.

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Confidence (lacking) in the mining space – by Nastassia Arendse (Mineweb.com – September 1, 2015)

http://www.mineweb.com/

EY’s review of mining M&A presents options for resource companies.

JOHANNESBURG – Is the mining Industry facing a crisis in confidence? As falling commodity prices eat away at earnings for the world’s largest miners, some investors (if not all) are focusing on how the industry will survive with its near-record levels of debt. And it’s looking quite ugly. Commodity prices, return on capital, finding ways of maintaining costs, these are just some of the issues keeping industry leaders up at night.

A key challenge in the mining industry is access to capital. In a recent report released by EY, mergers, acquisitions (M&A) and capital raising activity remained low over the first half of 2015, with the sector remaining largely focused on portfolio management instead of exploring other avenues for growth. Overall activity is 30% lower than the same period in 2014, dropping to $12.7 billion.

“I would say that M&A activity is not low because of a lack of effort, but the ability to fund those transactions is very, very low” said Wickus Botha, Head of Mining & Metals at EY.

For some of the majors who are sitting with a strong balance sheet, their dilemma is not knowing what to do with the capital.

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Canada officially in a recession as GDP shrinks 0.5% in second quarter – by John Shmuel (National Post – September 1, 2015)

The National Post is Canada’s second largest national paper.

Canada’s economy contracted by 0.5 per cent in the second quarter, Statistics Canada revealed Tuesday, officially putting the Canadian economy in recession for the first half of the year.

Statscan also revised its first quarter GDP reading down to 0.8 per cent, from an earlier report of 0.6 per cent. A technical recession is defined as two back-to-back quarters of economic contraction.

Economists polled by Thomson Reuters had forecast that Canada’s economy would contract by 1.0 per cent in the second quarter.

While growth overall for the first half was weak, the second quarter ended with a strong handoff — GDP grew by 0.5 per cent in June, the strongest monthly reading in more than a month. Economists had expected growth of 0.2 per cent.

“The momentum registered in June is consistent with our view that Q3 will provide a breather as the economy,” said Avery Shenfeld, chief economist at CIBC World Markets.

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Gold Isn’t the Safe Haven Investors Thought It Would Be – by Debarati Roy (Bloomberg News – August 30, 2015)

http://www.bloomberg.com/

Gold bulls piled into the metal in hopes that the turmoil sweeping financial markets would finally help revive prices. They were wrong.

Instead of a rally, futures in New York fell for four straight sessions even as global equities plunged to a two-year low. Rather than providing a refuge from the meltdown, gold’s volatility rose right along with a measure of equity turbulence, diminishing its appeal as a haven. As stocks started to recover, the metal kept falling because of reports that signaled gains for the U.S. economy.

It’s been a tough two years for investors in gold, which first fell into a bear market in April 2013. More than $52 billion has been wiped from the value of physical bullion funds since then. Money managers last week raised their net-long position to the highest since June just before futures capped the worst slump in a month. Stubbornly low inflation along with the prospect of tighter U.S. monetary policy has kept a lid on the metal, which doesn’t pay interest or offer returns, unlike competing assets.

“A good test for gold was the latest round of volatility, and gold did not do much, since it has become unattractive as a safe haven,” said Atul Lele, who helps oversee $5.1 billion as the chief investment officer at Nassau, Bahamas-based Deltec International Group.

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Tragic story in Alberta government’s first fiscal update: A $6-billion deficit and soaring unemployment – by Claudia Cattaneo (National Post – September 1, 2015)

The National Post is Canada’s second largest national paper.

Alberta’s first fiscal update under the new NDP government paints a tragic picture of the once-booming oil province: a deficit of nearly $6-billion, and growing, despite higher income and corporate taxes; soaring unemployment; slumping manufacturing; and an expected 0.6% GDP contraction in 2015.

If that weren’t bad enough, the province is also reeling from a drought that is hurting its large agricultural sector as well as devastation from forest fires, which boosted the government’s disaster assistance expenses.

“There is no doubt that our big challenge is commodity prices that the government of Alberta does not control,” Alberta Finance Minister Joe Ceci told reporters after presenting the first-quarter forecast for 2015/2016 fiscal year revenue and expenses. “We all know that the price of oil has dropped dramatically in August. Nobody expected global oil prices to reach the levels they are at today.”

Indeed, Ceci suggested the deficit projection could swell to $6.5-billion by the time his government tables its first budget in October, and that the books won’t be balanced until 2018/2019.

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Let Coal Die a Natural Death – by Editorial Board (Bloomberg News – September 1, 2015)

http://www.bloombergview.com/

Coal-fired electricity is becoming ever less profitable. That’s the good news — or it should be, since it gives power companies greater incentive to embrace cleaner and cheaper sources of energy.

But not every energy company is content to let the market guide its decision-making. In a role reversal, at least one energy company is asking regulators to intervene to keep coal profitable for a while longer.

In Ohio, the Public Utilities Commission is considering a request from the Akron company FirstEnergy to have consumers cover the higher cost of electricity from three aging coal plants. (One of these just underwent a $1.8 billion pollution-control upgrade to comply with federal law.)

The aim is to keep the plants open for another 15 years. Under this plan, FirstEnergy ratepayers could spend $3 billion more than necessary for electricity, according to the Office of the Ohio Consumers’ Counsel, a state agency.

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When a slump hits a vast iron ore mine in Australia – by Ali Moore (BBC News – August 31, 2015)

http://www.bbc.com/

Cloudbreak mine, Western Australia – Australia’s iron ore industry has hit a slump after decades of boom fuelled by rampant demand from China. This is threatening the livelihoods of thousands of miners and entire communities dependent on these vast opencast mines.

At Perth Airport, just after 05:00 local time, the boarding gate is a sea of fluorescent yellow and blue. This is a regular shuttle service to Fortescue Metals’ Cloudbreak mine – the passengers are fly-in-fly-out workers and they come dressed for the job.

In just under two hours they’ll land at one of the giant iron ore mines in the Pilbara, where the red dirt hides untold riches. But times have changed. The price of ore has plummeted, down around 70% from its 2013 peak.

Every mine worker boarding Flight 1970 knows what that means: cost cuts. They’ve seen hundreds of millions of dollars worth of cuts across the industry already and more are likely to come.

China’s economic slowdown means the country doesn’t need as much iron ore. It’s the key ingredient for steel, and if you’re not building as many apartments and bridges and roads as before, you don’t need as much of it.

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Editorial: Why the commodities super cycle was a myth (Financial Times – August 31, 2015)

http://www.ft.com/

Falling prices show the world is not running out of resources

In 1980, the economist Julian Simon challenged doom-mongering biologist Paul Ehrlich to a bet that the prices of any five metals would be lower in 10 years’ time. He won, and made his point: over the long run, technological progress means commodity prices are likely to fall in real terms.

From the early 2000s, many investors forgot that lesson. The idea that there are decades-long “super-cycles” in commodity prices has some respectability: a 2012 paper by Bilge Erten of the UN and José Antonio Ocampo of Columbia University found evidence for four such cycles during the period 1865-2009. But in the bastardised form that became popular in the 2000s , the concept gained less honourable currency, as a story that commodities were a one-way bet upwards.

With oil down about 57 per cent from its peak last June, and copper and iron ore down about 50 and 70 per cent respectively from their peaks in early 2011, it has become clear that story was profoundly misleading. Whether or not the supercycle exists, the regular old cycle definitely does, and there is nothing very super about it at all.

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UPDATE 1-Union mulling action on job cuts at Freeport Chile copper mine (Reuters U.S. – August 31, 2015)

http://www.reuters.com/

Aug 31 (Reuters) – A Chilean union that represents copper mine workers rejected a move by Freeport-McMoRan Inc to drastically cut staff at its El Abra mine and said on Monday it was considering action.

Last week, Arizona-based Freeport, which owns a 51 percent stake in the mine in northern Chile, became one of the first big global miners to announce it was slashing production because of slumping copper prices.

That would include reducing mining rates at El Abra by about 50 percent to cut and defer costs, and extend the mine’s life, the company said.

Over the weekend Freeport began to send out letters announcing the dismissals and refusing to negotiate, said Juana Mejias, who heads the mine’s local union, adding that around 700 workers were being fired.

“The situation is complex and a true massacre that they have carried out by dismissing 50 percent of the workforce,” she said in a statement on Monday.

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WA chills as BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Fortescue cut $20b spending – by Julie-anne Sprague (Australian Financial Review – August 30, 2015)

http://www.afr.com/

A dramatic $20 billion cut in operational spending by the nation’s three biggest iron ore miners is chilling a West Australian economy already under stress from falling investment in resources-related construction.

Analysis by The Australian Financial Review reveals that since 2012, BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto and Fortescue Metals Group have cut the amount they spend on extracting resources by $US14.3 billion ($19.9 billion).

While this figure includes BHP and Rio’s global operations, the majority of the cuts have been generated from their West Australian iron ore operations.

This excludes massive cuts to capital expenditure. With laser like precision the miners are tightening the cost screws beyond cutting staff and salaries.

They’re cutting meals served on flights to remote mine sites, pulling biscuits from the tea rooms and reducing the number of uniforms issued to staff.

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Aimed at Curbing Job Losses at Mines – by Andre Janse Van Vuuren (Bloomberg News – August 31, 2015)

http://www.bloomberg.com/

South Africa’s government, mining companies and labor unions adopted a 10-point plan Monday in an attempt to curb job losses in an industry where more than 11,700 people are at risk of losing their employment.

The plan includes proposals to improve productivity, the re-skilling of workers and the transfer of employees between companies, Minister of Mineral Resources Ngoako Ramatlhodi told reporters in Pretoria. The government and mine operators will also seek buyers for distressed assets that could be run profitably under different management, Ramatlhodi said.

The proposals were adopted after mining operators including Lonmin Plc and Anglo American Plc announced plans to reduce their workforce as metal prices fell to their lowest levels since the fallout from the global financial crisis in 2009.

While the government has received notices of plans to cut as many as 11,798 jobs, unions say the figure could be as high as 19,000.

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Colorado mining disaster shows Maine was right to reject mining rules — again – by Nick Bennett (Bangor Daily News – August 30, 2015)

https://bangordailynews.com/

Nick Bennett is staff scientist and watersheds project director at the Natural Resource Council of Maine.

2015 has been a year of seconds with respect to mining. For the second time, the Department of Environmental Protection submitted the same weak mining rules it submitted to the Legislature in 2014. For the second time, the Legislature wisely rejected them.

Also for the second straight year, a mining disaster occurred soon after the end of the legislative session and proved that the Legislature was right to reject DEP’s rules. On Aug. 4, 2014, the tailings dam at the Mount Polley mine in British Columbia failed, releasing billions of gallons of mining waste into pristine lakes and streams.

The effects of the pollution from this modern mine, which its owner built in 1997, will linger for decades in some of the most important salmon habitat in Western Canada.

After the Mount Polley disaster, many Mainers breathed a sigh of relief that the Legislature had blocked weak rules that would have allowed Canada-based J.D. Irving to mine at Bald Mountain.

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It’s time for a Better Dialogue about Mineral Exploration and Development – by Gavin Dirom (Vancouver Province – August 31, 2015)

http://blogs.theprovince.com/

Gavin Dirom is president and chief executive officer of the Association for Mineral Exploration British Columbia.

Over the past few months, some observers in Alaska have expressed fears about mineral exploration and mining development in northwestern British Columbia. The concerns primarily relate to water quality in rivers originating in British Columbia and draining into southeastern Alaska. These rivers support important salmon runs and communities in both jurisdictions. As good neighbours and allies, Canadian mineral explorers and developers understand and respect these concerns. We also care about our shared water and salmon.

Northwestern British Columbia is a mountainous area with high mineral development potential. This rugged area, with its world-class deposits can help provide us with the critical metals and minerals that we all use in our everyday lives. By discovering and developing mineral resources, our industry makes a major contribution to modern society. Without it, we would have no bicycles, no boats, no electric cars, no iPhones, no lights and no hospitals. These are just a few of the things that require metals and minerals that we all take for granted.

Finding a balance between environmental, social and economic values is a challenge we all face. But that is nothing new. Responsible mineral explorers acknowledge that there will always be some impacts when developing a mine, and we agree that these need to be soundly assessed and properly mitigated.

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Trying to avoid the ‘extinction’ of Canada’s junior mining companies – by Simon Doyle (Globe and Mail – August 31, 2015)

The Globe and Mail is Canada’s national newspaper with the second largest broadsheet circulation in the country. It has enormous influence on Canada’s political and business elite.

Simon Doyle covers lobbying and the intersection of business and politics in Ottawa. He writes for Politics Insider, which is available only to subscribers of Globe Unlimited.

The mining industry is lobbying for government help for junior mining companies and northern infrastructure as more juniors have delisted from the TSX and the commodities rout has deepened.

Minerals continued to fall early last week before a tumultuous few days on the markets. Fears about China’s economy and its metals consumption have refreshed arguments among members of Canada’s mining-industry associations for government measures to support the sector.

“The government appreciates the circumstances,” said Rod Thomas, head of mineral exploration industry group the Prospectors and Developers Association of Canada, whose group has been calling for an expanded junior mining tax credit, investment in northern infrastructure and relaxed rules for raising capital.

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Australian gold output on the rise – by Lawrie Williams (Mineweb.com – August 31, 2015)

http://www.mineweb.com/

Surbiton Associates in its latest survey of the Australian gold sector notes rising production during the June quarter.

LONDON – The world’s second largest gold mining nation, Australia, saw gold output rise in the June quarter according to a survey by Melbourne-based consultancy, Surbiton Associates.
Gold production for the period totalled some 72 tonnes (2.31 million ounces), an increase of almost three tonnes or four per cent over the March 2015 quarter. With most Australian miners having June year-ends, Surbiton puts the fiscal year total (to end-June) at 285 tonnes.

In Mineweb’s analysis of global gold output in calendar 2014, derived from figures from London-based consultancy Metals Focus, China was the world’s leading producer that year with annual output of 462 tonnes with Australia second, just ahead of Russia, with a little over 272 tonnes.

So the latest Surbiton figures suggest Australian gold output could well be heading strongly higher in calendar 2015. (See: Gold’s top 20 – mines, miners and countries). China is also believed to be producing more gold this year than last.

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