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Balochistan halts $3.5bn copper project

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Balochistan halts $3.5bn copper project By Syed Fazl-e-Haider Jan 12, 2010

KARACHI - Local authorities in Pakistan have canceled an agreement with an Australian company for the exploration of copper and gold in the Reko Diq area in southwestern Balochistan province at a time when a feasibility study for the project was near completion.

Australia's Tethyan Copper Company (TCC), a joint venture between Canada's Barrick Gold and Chile's Antofagasta Plc, had an exploration license for the copper mine at Reko Diq, which has an estimated four billion tonnes of low-grade copper and gold, in the district of Chagai.

Last month, when the Balochistan government passed a motion to terminate the contract with TCC, it called the move a step towards getting control over provincial resources in accordance with the wishes of the people. Critics said the local government's action was politically motivated to appease Baloch nationalists in the desperately poor and insurgency-hit province, who have been demanding the cancelation of the agreement.

The deal was signed under the government of former president Pervez Musharraf. The present central coalition government led by the Pakistan People's Party is trying to end the insurgency and recently presented a "Balochistan Package", which recommends a series of constitutional reforms, economic measures and administrative steps to assuage the feelings of the Baloch people.

Balochistan chief minister Nawab Aslam Raisani said TCC had violated its contract, which had been signed only for exploring for minerals, according to the Dawn newspaper. The federal government had not yet sought any explanation from the Balochistan government over the cancellation of deal, the report cited Raisani as saying. The provincial cabinet decision relates to the termination of the exploration contract after it expired, while the fate of the company's proposal for a mining agreement is yet to be decided, according to the chief minister.

Tethyan, which had a 75% interest in the project, allegedly introduced unnecessary delays and exceeded the limits of the contract, which was awarded only for drilling purposes. The provincial government, which has decided not to lease out the land to TCC for further work, is believed to be looking for other investors and technical expertise to manage the project indigenously.

TCC sees the contract cancelation as a violation of internationally accepted exploration rules, under which the exploration company gets the first rights to mining in the project area, as no mining firm can invest billions of dollars only in exploration.

The United States has urged the central and provincial governments to stand behind their agreements with international companies, as the cancelation of the Reko Diq copper contract, involving two major international mining firms threatens to cost the country a loss of US$3.5 billion in investment for one of its least developed regions.

"Multinational corporations will not invest in a country where deals are canceled," a Business Recorder report last Thursday quoted the US ambassador to Pakistan, Anne Patterson, as saying.

Some analysts believe the Reko Diq mine may now be developed with the help of China, which is engaged in extracting copper from the Saindak mine in the same district. They also warn that the government should learn from its experience at Saindak. Metallurgical Corp of China (MCC), which acquired Saindak on a 10-year lease in September 2002, is overmining in the area at the cost of the mine's estimated life of 19 years, say local experts. They also point out that copper extraction creates various toxic wastes, but there is still no reliable data available on the production and environmental impact at Saindak.

Reko Diq, with an estimated life span of more than 50 years, is four times larger in copper ore tonnage than Saindak.

The provincial government has handed over affairs of the Reko Diq project to the provincial department of mines and mineral development, which has acquired the services of Samar Mubarakmand, an eminent Pakistani nuclear scientist.

TCC has been criticized for selling its interests to Antofagasta and Barrick without the permission of the Balochistan government, which holds the remaining 25% interest. Barrick's share price in New York has declined from a one-year high of just below $48 on December 1 to $41.43 last week, after recovering from about $38 on December 17. Antofagasta is trading at 1,024 pence in London, close to its one-year high and more than double its price of a year ago.

Analysts also question why, if the provincial government had some grievance against TCC's operations, it did not react earlier when the company declared in July that it would invest $3 billion in the project in the current fiscal year, which ends in June.

The cancelation is "a non-routine solution", said Sardar Shaukat Popalzai, president of the Balochistan Economic Forum, according to The Nation daily newspaper. The relevant departments and political leadership should not take unwarranted decisions after projects are considered and then initiated after all clearances are granted on their merits, he said. Popalzai has reportedly suggested that a provincial assembly committee, along with a sub-committee consisting of local stakeholders, including the investors, should be formed to remove all irritants.

TCC itself has "not yet received any cancelation notice for the Reko Diq project from the government", Samia Ali Shah, the company's public relations manager, told Asia Times Online. "We will decide our strategy as soon as we receive notification from the Balochistan government."

She said, "Tethyan is currently undertaking a feasibility study, which is in its final stages, for development of the Reko Diq mine."

Feasibility studies include engineering analysis and studies of infrastructure alternatives involving the likes of rail, road, power, port and water supplies and overall technical and economical viability. "The environmental and social impact assessment [ESIA] of the project is also expected to finish at the end of the first quarter of this calendar year."

The Balochistan government first signed a contract for the Reko Diq exploration area with BHP Minerals in July 1993 and established a joint venture with BHP Billiton in June 2000, with the government keeping a 25% interest against BHP's 75%. TCC, which holds an alliance with BHP Billiton, raised funds for the project by floating its shares on the Australian Stock Exchange and planned to start the project in 2003 with an investment of $130 million.

Samia said her company was responsible for progress made since 2006, when Antofagasta and Barrick Gold took complete control of TCC, which is now a joint-venture company.

She said, "We have so far made significant progress. We had only 50 people as employees of the project in 2006 when Barrick Gold and Antofagasta took over the project. The number of our permanent employees presently exceeds 200.

"We spent $100 million, including expenditures on the feasibility study in 2008. An additional 146,000 meters were drilled last year and showed significantly large resource estimates at Reko Diq. The infrastructure developed at the exploration and feasibility stage of the project includes an airstrip and high-standard camp site facilities."

Samia said a large part of the promised investment of $3 billion would start coming as soon as the project entered the construction phase, after completion of the feasibility report and signing of agreements with the government.

Balochistan, the country's least-developed province but a prospective metaphorical and literal gold mine for companies eyeing its untapped mineral reserves and hydrocarbon resources, direly needs foreign investment to create jobs, develop communities and boost revenues.

The district of Chagai is one of the most backward and least-developed areas in Balochistan. It lacks healthcare facilities and has a poor educational infrastructure. The human development indicators in the district are among the most challenging in the country. With no infrastructure, no proper road network and no industry, the people of the Chagai desert lack almost any employment opportunities.

TCC has spent $1.5 million to date on initiatives such as training local people, local procurement, a school house, a health clinic, teacher training, and humanitarian aid for natural disasters like floods and earthquakes in Balochistan. The company also provides training to the local women in tailoring skills to establish local businesses to supply TCC uniforms.

Samia said, "We plan extensive training and capacity building programs to prepare local people for work within the Reko Diq project. We see our role as a catalyst for economic and social development of the communities we operate in."

The first batch of TCC employees, 80% from the province and about 76% of them from Chagai, has already been sent to the Descon Institute in Lahore for training.
Asia Times Online :: South Asia news, business and economy from India and Pakistan
 
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If thats true then its welcomed! its a good decision since the copper and gold estimated there is abount 65$ billion of worth almost twice the total debt on pakistan and was given to Austrailian & Chilian companies almost free.
 
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agreed in toto...
it was a rip off with only 20% share belonging to the gov.
 
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I suspect a Chinese influence in curbing the Australian companies . China has majority rights in extracting copper from Balochistan.
 
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Well whose ever influence I saw
YEYYYY Balochi baby !
The resources can be best used and shared in Pakistan.
outside Pakistan should not be allowed.
 
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Mark my words guys : Australian economy will be sitting duck without Chinese investments every one knows that.

I Think Pakistan and China should start world's biggest Mining company & i can clearly say that all resources in Pakistan and middle east could go in favor of ours.

Regards:
 
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In fact there were allot of rumors circulating around that the Australian and other company were not hiring locals for jobs and also they were creating a false propaganda that they were terrorists. That said, it was something that came to me in an email and not sure about how authentic the article was.

So if the above was true or not a very good decission by the state gov. But I hope that they dont do what they kicked out the other company for, and give the state; and its people its rights.
 
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Pakistan threatens to pull $3bn mining project
By Farhan Bokhari in Islamabad
Published: January 14 2010 06:59 | Last updated: January 14 2010 06:59
Pakistan is threatening to cancel a $3bn copper and gold exploration project by Canada’s Barrick Gold and Chilean miner Antofagasta in the country’s resource-rich south-western Baluchistan province, citing the pressing need to “protect the country’s national interests”.

Speaking to the Financial Times, Shaukat Tarin, Pakistan’s finance minister, said: “We can’t continue with this project in its present form. We have to protect our key national interests.”

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The provincial government of Baluchistan last month recommended the cancellation of the Reko Diq contract, a move that needs the federal government’s backing before it can be formalised.

The province of Baluchistan has a 25 per cent stake in the project, expected to cost $3bn to develop, with the rest owned by the two mining companies since 2006.

Mr Tarin’s comments are likely to upset the few foreign investors still prepared to venture into the strife-ridden south Asian country but the government wants to avoid selling valuable assets at a throwaway price.

The minister said raw copper extracted from the Reko Diq site in Baluchistan would earn between $40bn and $50bn in the next 25-30 years.

He argued that Pakistan would earn 10 times the amount if the copper was processed and sold in a refined form. “Why should they [the investors] take our raw material for processing to a third country and then make huge profits?”

A senior official in the provincial government of Baluchistan said that sales from the site could jump to $1,000bn in the next 25-30 years if earnings from gold and other precious minerals were included. The Reko Diq site holds up to 11bn pounds of copper and 9m ounces of gold reserves, according to the government.

Baluchistan, surrounded by borders with Iran and Afghanistan, and a southern coastline touching the Arabian sea, has been at the centre of a continuing nationalist insurgency for almost four decades. Rich in mineral resources, Baluchistan is also the most sparsely populated and the poorest of Pakistan’s five provinces.

The government of Pakistan’s president Asif Ali Zardari has been trying to pacify armed militants in Baluchistan, by offering incentives such as more money for social services and larger representation for people from the province to high level government positions.

A key contentious issue remains a deep sea port developed with China’s financial assistance at Gwadar – once a dusty fishing town on Baluchistan’s Arabian sea coast. Nationalists from Baluchistan have repeatedly demanded the revenues from Gwadar to be given to the province rather than shared with the federal government.

This follows a long standing demand by Baluch nationalists for billions of dollars in payments from the federal government for outstanding royalties for the gas pumped from the province to other parts of Pakistan.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.

FT.com / Companies / Mining - Pakistan threatens to pull $3bn mining project
 
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Mark my words guys : Australian economy will be sitting duck without Chinese investments every one knows that.

:

Assuming a situation where China continues to dominate the world's manufacturing industry, in such case, I would tend to agree with you bro.

Australian economy is a primary one and is heavily skewed towards minerals and ore exports. Their geographical location inhibits any of their finished goods exports being competitive internationally, expect of course, food products.

But, continuing with the Chinese dependence will also turn them in to an economic "Client" state which will soon also bear upon their foreign policy. They already had a taste of things via the Rio Tinto situation which has now forced even Kevin Rudd to start relinquishing his love for all things Chinese, though just a bit yet....
 
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Pakistan is threatening to cancel a $3bn copper and gold exploration project by Canada’s Barrick Gold and Chilean miner Antofagasta in the country’s resource-rich south-western Baluchistan province, citing the pressing need to “protect the country’s national interests”.

Speaking to the Financial Times, Shaukat Tarin, Pakistan’s finance minister, said: “We can’t continue with this project in its present form. We have to protect our key national interests.”
The provincial government of Baluchistan last month recommended the cancellation of the Reko Diq contract, a move that needs the federal government’s backing before it can be formalised.

The province of Baluchistan has a 25 per cent stake in the project, expected to cost $3bn to develop, with the rest owned by the two mining companies since 2006.

Mr Tarin’s comments are likely to upset the few foreign investors still prepared to venture into the strife-ridden south Asian country but the government wants to avoid selling valuable assets at a throwaway price.

The minister said raw copper extracted from the Reko Diq site in Baluchistan would earn between $40bn and $50bn in the next 25-30 years.

He argued that Pakistan would earn 10 times the amount if the copper was processed and sold in a refined form. “Why should they [the investors] take our raw material for processing to a third country and then make huge profits?”

A senior official in the provincial government of Baluchistan said that sales from the site could jump to $1,000bn in the next 25-30 years if earnings from gold and other precious minerals were included. The Reko Diq site holds up to 11bn pounds of copper and 9m ounces of gold reserves, according to the government.

Baluchistan, surrounded by borders with Iran and Afghanistan, and a southern coastline touching the Arabian sea, has been at the centre of a continuing nationalist insurgency for almost four decades. Rich in mineral resources, Baluchistan is also the most sparsely populated and the poorest of Pakistan’s five provinces.

The government of Pakistan’s president Asif Ali Zardari has been trying to pacify armed militants in Baluchistan, by offering incentives such as more money for social services and larger representation for people from the province to high level government positions.

A key contentious issue remains a deep sea port developed with China’s financial assistance at Gwadar – once a dusty fishing town on Baluchistan’s Arabian sea coast. Nationalists from Baluchistan have repeatedly demanded the revenues from Gwadar to be given to the province rather than shared with the federal government.

This follows a long standing demand by Baluch nationalists for billions of dollars in payments from the federal government for outstanding royalties for the gas pumped from the province to other parts of Pakistan.
.Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web
 
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Please clear some points:
As per the caption..Pakinstan "Threats" to withdraw.
Why this threat? What do they want?
If pakistan wants to “protect the country’s national interests”, then simply cancel the deal....why threat?
As I understand..threat is given.if U want something from the other party. What is that "something"--- more partnership,jobs, better deal ?????
 
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thats a good news....... i was cursing musharraf big time after he handed over these assets to australia and chille.............. thank god we can utilize them for our needs in future once again
 
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thats a good news....... i was cursing musharraf big time after he handed over these assets to australia and chille.............. thank god we can utilize them for our needs in future once again

Who is going to invest $3 Billion USD in Pakistan??

Name one new foreign investor which has invested $3 Billion USD in Balochistan in the last 15 years.

Countries which don't have infrastructure, security and funds to build such mega projects rely on foreign investments whic take the lion's share in profit.

Curse Gen. Musharraf as much as you want to but please don't support such idiotic nonsense.

SANDAK projects was initiated in 1970s by the late ZA Bhutto govt and till 2002 there was no movement on the project, finally the govt. turned around and handed the reins to China.

From 1988 till 1999, we have had clowns ruling Pakistan who ripped off Pakistan to fill their own accounts, why do you expect them to act in favour of Pakistan now when so much money is involved??

Have you already forgotten NS's qarz utaro mulk sanwaro? Have yuo already forgotten the corruption of Zardari?

Why do you think they are sincere to Pakistan today?

There is no breach of contract by the TCC, these actions are taken to get kick backs from TCC. If GoP terminates this contract, TCC will take GoP to International court and all of the dirty laundry will become public.

Wait for a few months and you will see that GoP has signed an agreement with the same company for post exploration projects.
 
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