Cliffs still fuzzy on chromite timeline – by Ian Ross (Sudbury Northern Life – November 7, 2012)

 http://www.northernlife.ca/

Black Thor faces cost pressures, volatile markets, First Nations opposition

The timelines for Cliffs Natural Resources to develop a chromite mining project in the James Bay lowlands still remain somewhat murky.

Bill Boor, Cliffs’ senior vice-president of global ferroalloys, spoke to a Sudbury Chamber of Commerce lunchtime crowd Nov. 6 to outline progress on the massive $3.3-billion Black Thor mine and Capreol furnace project, and also to tamp down reports that the Ohio miner’s development timelines are slipping by one year.

Boor maintains that the company is still shooting for a late-2016 start-up for mining operations, despite earlier comments by his CEO, Joseph Carrabba, that cost pressures and volatile markets could push back the start-up of production to 2017.

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BHP starts search for new CEO: report – by Pav Jordan (Globe and Mail – November 8, 2012)

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.

Marius Kloppers, the energetic chief executive who led the failed charge by Australia’s BHP Billiton Ltd. to acquire Potash Corp. of Saskatchewan, may soon be a free agent.

The Financial Times said on Wednesday that BHP, the world’s largest diversified miner, has begun its search to replace Mr. Kloppers within the next two years, and the company did not deny the reports.

Succession planning for the CEO and senior management team is an on-going process and one of the most critical tasks of any board,” BHP said in an e-mailed statement, adding that it would not comment directly on the Financial Times story.

“BHP Billiton’s Board has always ensured that it has a well-integrated, continual succession process in place for our most senior executives.” Mr. Kloppers, who grew up in apartheid South Africa where he was conscripted into the army at the age of 18, became BHP’s CEO in late 2007, just as the first wave of the financial crisis was washing over global commodity markets.

Now 50, Mr. Kloppers has had a rough ride of it, failing in some key attempts to grow the already giant company through high profile acquisitions that ultimately fell through.

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Wahgoshig First Nation – Ontario sending misguided message to First Nations – NNL Staff (NetNewsLedger.com – November 7, 2012)

http://www.netnewsledger.com/

SUDBURY – Mining News – Wahgoshig First Nation Chief David Babin with support from Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) Grand Chief Harvey Yesno is calling on Ontario to withdraw its support and public endorsement of racist and radical industry representatives, particularly members of the Mining United group and the Ontario Prospectors Association.

“Representatives of this radical association of junior mining groups has waged a racist media campaign against the Wahgoshig First Nation, who are taking a legal and principled position to defend their Treaty and aboriginal rights, as well as ensuring that Ontario meets its obligations on ‘the duty to consult’ in good faith,” said Grand Chief Yesno. “The Province of Ontario and the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines continue to send a misguided message to First Nations by supporting this group.”

Mr. Darryl Stretch who represents Mining United, and Solid Gold Resources Corporation is presenting at the 2012 Ontario Exploration and Geoscience Symposium (OEGS) to be held in Sudbury, ON November 6 and 7 2012. The Ontario Exploration & Geoscience Symposium is coordinated by the Ontario Prospectors Association with workshops, a variety of technical presentations and exhibits.

Of concern to NAN is the continued support of Minister Rick Bartolucci for the Ontario Prospectors Association (OPA), who will have a full line up of MNDM staff alongside Mr. Darryl Stretch who is scheduled to present directly to the symposium delegates. Mr. Garry Clark, Executive Director of the OPA, member of the Minister of Mines Mining Act Advisory Committee and the Ontario Geological Survey Advisory Board has also stated publicly that Mining United may become a subcommittee of the OPA organization.

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Ring of Fire rail plan adds new twist to old debate – by Shawn Bell (Wawatay News – November 7, 2012)

Northern Ontario’s First Nations Voice: http://wawataynews.ca/

Figuring out how to link the proposed Ring of Fire mines to market has been a long standing debate. Whether ore should travel east-west or north-south has been the primary discussion, with stakeholders across the spectrum weighing in on which way is best.

Through it all, the idea of using a railway instead of a road has been kept quietly on the backburner. Now a new coalition of unlikely partners is trying to bring the rail option to the forefront.

In what it calls a New Deal for northern Ontario, a group led by the James Bay Lowlands Ports and Trustee Corporation (JBLPTC) has proposed an ambitious, publically-owned transportation corridor that would tie the Ring of Fire to existing northern Ontario railway lines while taking over control of the Ontario Northern Transportation Company (ONTC) and continuing passenger rail services from James Bay to the south.

The plan is in its early stages. The JBLPTC still needs approval by the federal government under the Canada Marine Act to officially operate as a port. And even if it gets that federal approval, the organization needs Ontario to grant it control over the existing ONTC, while finding financial backing to build a new rail line from Nakina to the Ring of Fire.

But Roy Haines, CEO of the JBLPTC, is optimistic that the plan can not only get off the ground, but that it can succeed in spreading the benefits of the Ring of Fire across a wider group of stakeholders and keep the infrastructure publically-owned.

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Critics say Liberals need to do more – by Star Staff (Sudbury Star – November 8, 2012)

The Sudbury Star is the City of Greater Sudbury’s daily newspaper.

The Liberal government needs to do more to get the so-called Ring of Fire back on track, Conservative’s Northern Development and Mines critic charged Wednesday.

Norm Miller, who is also the MPP for Parry Sound-Muskoka, said in a release he was disappointed Cliffs Natural Resources announced last week it would push back production at its Black Thor chromite mine to 2017.

Cliffs, a Cleveland-based company, had planned to begin production at Black Thor in Northwestern Ontario by 2015. The company also plans to build a smelter to process chromite, which is used to harden steel, in Capreol.

Miller said this and other Ring of Fire projects have the potential to create new jobs, but the provincial government has mishandled its development.

“Exploration work in the Ring of Fire has ground to a halt,” Miller said in a release. “You would think the Liberal government would be doing all they could to keep work going, especially with all the jobs and investment potential that are at stake as their $15-billion deficit hangs over the province and 600,000 Ontarians still find themselves out of work.

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Exploration sector ‘still vibrant’ – by Heidi Ulrichsen (Sudbury Northern Life – November 7, 2012)

http://www.northernlife.ca/

Commodity price woes cause small activity dip

With the recent dip in commodity prices, exploration activity has fallen since last year, but not by much, according to the executive director of the Ontario Prospectors Association.

“In 2011, there was $1 billion for exploration and development spent in the province,” said Garry Clark. “This year they estimate it’s just over $900 million. We’ve gone down a bit, but it’s still very vibrant and employing a lot of people around the North.”

Members of the association gathered in Sudbury Nov. 6-7 for the Ontario Exploration and Geoscience Symposium, listening to speakers and browsing the booths at a trade fair at the Steelworkers Hall.

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Vale’s former boss Agnelli eyes Guinea potential again – by Clara Ferreira-Marques (UK Reuters – November 7, 2012)

http://uk.reuters.com/

Nov 7 (Reuters) – A mining venture co-founded by the former boss of Vale, Roger Agnelli, is among suitors eyeing BHP Billiton’s slice of the Mount Nimba iron ore deposit in Guinea, sources familiar with the matter said.

Other suitors for BHP’s share of the joint venture that holds the Nimba mining concession include the world’s largest steelmaker ArcelorMittal, which has a mine just over the border in Liberia, the sources said.

A dealmaker by background, Agnelli is staging a return to West Africa with billionaire banker Andre Esteves. Two years ago, Agnelli led Brazilian miner Vale’s push into Guinea, controversially taking a stake in iron ore assets that included blocks of the Simandou deposit confiscated by the government from rival Rio Tinto.

Agnelli, 53, was ousted from Vale last year after a decade at the helm. Analysts said his plans for a multinational Vale, did not chime with the Brazilian government’s own, more nationalistic view.

He is returning to mining and Guinea through B&A Mineracao, a partnership between his venture AGN Participacoes and Esteves’ investment bank BTG Pactual Group, just after Vale’s new bosses shelved their major commitment in the country.

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Miners racist, natives charge – by Sebastien Perth (Sudbury Star – November 8, 2012)

The Sudbury Star is the City of Greater Sudbury’s daily newspaper.

Mining companies looking to work on First Nations territory should be better educated about native rights to prevent some of the racist treatment First Nations leaders charge their members have had to endure.

Dave Babin, chief of the Wahgoshig First Nation north of Kirkland Lake, singled out one company, and its president in particular, for criticism during a press conference in Sudbury on Wednesday.

Solid Gold Corporation president Darryl Stretch faced an injunction in January to stop his company from drilling near Lake Abitibi, while he consulted with the Wahgoshig First Nation.

In a Globe and Mail interview published in March, Stretch said the First Nation wanted him to pay $100,000 for a study to see if his company’s drilling went over any burial grounds.

“It’s not my obligation to go find arrowheads for those people, period,” he told the Globe. “If they don’t like you, you don’t work. What kind of deal is that? Because I didn’t do it right, the way the Indians wanted me to? Because I didn’t give them money? Because I didn’t beg them for permission to go? It’s just ridiculous, the whole concept.”

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First Nations level racist charges against mining association – by Northern Ontario Business staff (November 7, 2012)

Established in 1980, Northern Ontario Business provides Canadians and international investors with relevant, current and insightful editorial content and business news information about Ontario’s vibrant and resource-rich North.

Wahgoshig First Nation Chief David Babin and Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) Grand Chief Harvey Yesno are calling on the province to withdraw its support of the Ontario Prospectors Association (OPA) and an industry fringe group for what they term a campaign of “racism” against First Nations.

“Representatives of this radical association of junior mining groups has waged a racist media campaign against the Wahgoshig First Nation, who are taking a legal and principled position to defend their treaty and aboriginal rights, as well as ensuring that Ontario meets its obligations on the duty to consult in good faith,” said Grand Chief Yesno in a Nov. 7 statement.

Babin and NAN were outraged by a presentation made by Darryl Stretch, president of Solid Gold Resources, at the Ontario Exploration and Geoscience Symposium in Sudbury on Nov.7. The annual event is hosted by the OPA and contains a significant provincial government presence.

Stretch is the midst of an ongoing, heated legal dispute with the Wahgoshig First Nation over an exploration drilling program at his Lake Abitibi gold play in northeastern Ontario.

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Chiefs want Ontario to cut support for ‘racist, radical’ industry groups – by Shawn Bell (Wawatay News – November 7, 2012)

Northern Ontario’s First Nations Voice: http://wawataynews.ca/

A junior mining company that called First Nations “hostile third-party governments” has raised the ire of indigenous leaders across Ontario.

Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN), the Chiefs of Ontario (COO) and Wahgoshig First Nation called on the Ontario government to withdraw its support of “racist and radical” industry representatives during a press conference in Sudbury Nov. 7.

The chiefs targeted Mining United, a group of junior exploration companies, and the Ontario Prospectors Association (OPA).

“Representatives of this radical association of junior mining groups has waged a racist media campaign against the Wahgoshig First Nation, who are taking a legal and principled position to defend their Treaty and Aboriginal rights, as well as ensuring that Ontario meets its obligations on ‘the duty to consult’ in good faith,” said NAN Grand Chief Harvey Yesno in a press release. “The Province of Ontario and the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines continue to send a misguided message to First Nations by supporting this group.”

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NEWS RELEASE: NAN GRAND CHIEF CALLS ON PROVINCE TO WITHDRAW ITS SUPPORT OF RADICAL MINING INDUSTRY GROUPS

 Wednesday, November 7, 2012

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

SUDBURY, ON: Wahgoshig First Nation Chief David Babin with support from Nishnawbe Aski Nation (NAN) Grand Chief Harvey Yesno is calling on Ontario to withdraw its support and public endorsement of racist and radical industry representatives, particularly members of the Mining United group and the Ontario Prospectors Association.

“Representatives of this radical association of junior mining groups has waged a racist media campaign against the Wahgoshig First Nation, who are taking a legal and principled position to defend their Treaty and aboriginal rights, as well as ensuring that Ontario meets its obligations on ‘the duty to consult’ in good faith,” said Grand Chief Yesno. “The Province of Ontario and the Ministry of Northern Development and Mines continue to send a misguided message to First Nations by supporting this group.”

Mr. Darryl Stretch who represents Mining United, and Solid Gold Resources Corporation is presenting at the 2012 Ontario Exploration and Geoscience Symposium (OEGS) to be held in Sudbury, ON November 6 and 7 2012.

The Ontario Exploration & Geoscience Symposium is coordinated by the Ontario Prospectors Association with workshops, a variety of technical presentations and exhibits.

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What’s holding Ontario back? – by Gordon Nixon and Kevin Lynch (Globe and Mail – November 7, 2012)

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.

Ontario – Northern Ontario, in particular – is rich in natural resources.
Northern development is one of Ontario’s great economic opportunities. With
industrial production surging in developing economies, demand for these
resources is high, and we need to capitalize on opportunities across the
value chain. (Gordon Nixon and Kevin Lynch)

Gordon Nixon, CEO of the Royal Bank of Canada, is chair of Ontario’s Jobs and Prosperity Council. Kevin Lynch, vice-chair of BMO Financial Group, is vice-chair of the council.

The world has changed, and Ontario must adapt or fall behind. Emerging economies are driving a new era of intense global competition. The Internet and information revolution have made the world smaller, entrenching globalization and accelerating the pace of change. Developed economies are mired in the aftermath of the worst financial crisis and global recession since the 1930s, and many of the advantages that underpinned their prosperity have vanished.

Developed economies across the world must reinvent themselves to compete and win in the new global marketplace. Ontario is no exception – the status quo is not an option.

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Ontario’s New Mining Act: The Good, the Bad and the Very, Very Ugly – by Stan Sudol (November 6, 2012)

This speech was given at the Ontario Prospectors Association: 2012 Ontario Exploration & Geoscience Symposium in Sudbury Ontario, November 6, 2012.

Check Against Delivery

Intro

Good evening everyone. It’s always great to get back to my hometown. I was born and raised in Sudbury and even worked at Inco’s Clarabell Mill for one year before going off to college.

And I also spent one summer underground at the Frood-Stobie mine way back in 1980, digging ditches, helping the miners, and digging more ditches. Regardless of all that ditch digging, the Inco jobs ensured a lifelong interest with this fascinating industry.

I was on a recent site visit at Superior Copper’s Bachawana Bay properties – 70 kilometers north of Sault Ste. Marie – when I heard the terrific news that McGuinty had resigned. I almost wanted to kiss the chalcocite outcrop that CEO Judy Baker was showing both me and a reporter from the Northern Miner.

I think northern Ontario history will not be kind to McGuinty. His many green legacies – including the detested Far North Act – and his economic mismanagement have left this province a much poorer place. McGuinty’s resignation is a small glimmer of hope for the junior exploration sector which has seen a really tough year.

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Union wary of Vale move – by Sebastien Perth (Sudbury Star – November 7, 2012)

The Sudbury Star is the City of Greater Sudbury’s daily newspaper.

Union leaders say they are suspicious of a move by Vale to house temporary workers dur ing construction of the company’s $2-billion pollution reduction project in Sudbury.

“I think its 90-10,90% towards the labour issue, 10% towards housing contract workers,” said Dennis Theriault, vice-president of Steelworkers Local 6500. “I think our community of 160,000 can handle an influx of 1,3001,800 workers, particularly when a great deal of those workers are supposed to be from our local community.”

Vale has applied to the city’s planning committee to amend a zoning bylaw to allow the company to house temporary workers working on its massive Clean AER project. Theriault, however, said the application is a charade to hide Vale’s real plans of housing replacement workers during a future labour dispute.

“I’m very disappointed and very concerned about this. The timing of the application reeks of an opportunity to house workers around the date of our contract ending. That would definitely have a huge impact on our bargaining position,” Theriault said.

The collective bargaining agreement between the USW and Vale expires May 31, 2015.

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Prospectors leery about Mining Act changes – by Ian Ross (Northern Ontario Business – November 6, 2012)

Established in 1980, Northern Ontario Business provides Canadians and international investors with relevant, current and insightful editorial content and business news information about Ontario’s vibrant and resource-rich North. Ian Ross is the editor of Northern Ontario Business ianross@nob.on.ca.

The head of the Ontario Prospectors Association harbours some trepidation on whether new regulations to the province’s Mining Act will reduce misunderstandings and conflict between the exploration industry and First Nations.

“We have some reservations on some of the things they are enacting,” said Garry Clark, the association’s executive director in Thunder Bay. The new rules are basically geared to improve the consultation process between government, industry and First Nations.

Included in the revised act are new requirements for notifying landowners and Aboriginal communities about proposed activities through a system of plans and permits during various phases of early exploration. Prospectors have been grumbling the new regulations in the revised act create more paperwork and slow down projects.

“We’re not 100 per cent sure that plans and permits are going to work, but on a personal level I think it’s one of the ways to go,” said Clark. “But we need First Nation communities’ buy-in and we’re not sure it’s there.”

Clark said each First Nation community is very individual and independent, making it difficult to have a one-window solution.

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