lundi 31 juillet 2017

Scientists find evidence for the formation of thinnest possible diamond

Scientists from the Brazilian Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais found new evidence that shows that diamonds can be forged in thin films called diamondene.

In a paper published in Nature Communications, the group of researchers led by physicist Luiz Gustavo Cançado explain that when a pair of graphene sheets are squeezed to pressures around tens of thousands of times that of Earth’s atmosphere and in the presence of specific chemical groups such as hydrogens, the crystal structure appears to morph from graphite to diamond.

This conclusion was reached by Cançado and his team after performing Raman spectroscopy to monitor the structure of the carbon crystal. By shining laser light on the material, they were able to see how the atoms’ vibrations changed under pressure. According to Science News, “this method provides indirect evidence that diamondene has formed. A next step is to scatter X-rays or electrons off the material to be sure of its structure.”

Diamondene is predicted to be a ferromagnetic semiconductor with spin polarized bands, something that is used in applications to store data.

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Gold shows solid performance in July

A struggling dollar and serious doubts about whether or not the U.S. Federal Reserve will raise interest rates again this year sent gold to its highest point in almost seven weeks.

Spot gold was down 0.1 per cent at $1,267.4 an ounce by 2:00 p.m. EDT, after rising to its highest since June 14 at $1,270.98. This means that the precious metal showed a strong performance in July, as it is on course for a 2.1 per cent rise this month.

U.S. gold futures settled down 0.1 per cent at $1,266.60.

Quoted by Reuters, Commerzbank analyst Eugen Weinberg explained that geopolitical tensions and internal uncertainty could mean a stronger demand for gold as the U.S. currency falls into its lowest in 16 months against a basket of currencies.

Silver, on the other hand, was up by 0.8 per cent to $16.79 an ounce, after rising to $16.88, the highest since June 29.

Palladium climbed 1.1 per cent to $886.30, and platinum rose 1 per cent to $938.30.

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Anaconda positive about drilling results in Nova Scotia

Toronto-based Anaconda Mining (ANX: TSX) announced today positive results from its first drill program at the Goldboro Project in Nova Scotia.

According to a press release sent out by the company, multiple occurrences of visible gold and assays with high-grade tenor were observed in their five-hole diamond drill program, which totaled 649 metres and was conducted in the Boston Richardson and East Goldbrook gold systems of the Goldboro deposit.

The miner spotted the highest grades yet recorded in the area:

  • 2,513.20 g/t gold over 0.5 metres within 485.07 g/t gold over 2.6 metres (33.1 to 35.7 metres) and 33.26 g/t gold over 1.0 metre (110.0 to 111.0 metres) in hole BR-17-04;
  • 7.85 g/t gold over 3.7 metres within 3.22 g/t gold over 11.4 metres (169.2 to 180.6 metres) in hole BR-17-02;
  • 9.77 g/t gold over 2.3 metres within 2.33 g/t gold over 13.4 metres (17.4 to 30.8 metres) in hole BR-17-03;
  • 16.96 g/t gold over 1 metre within 3.96 g/t gold over 5.5 metres (115.5 to 121 metres) in hole BR-17-05; and
  • 5.56 g/t gold over 1.2 metres within 1.35 g/t gold over 10 metres (25.0 to 35.0 metres) and 13.00 g/t over 0.5 metres within 3.65 g/t gold over 2 metres (53.5 to 55.5 metres) in hole BR-17-01.

Talking about these results, Anaconda’s CEO Dustin Angelo said there is potential for expansion. “As with historical exploration work, we continue to see significantly high-grades and very good thickness in the drill core. We are encouraged by the predictable geological model, which gives us confidence in the mineral resource and our ability to expand the deposit. Over the coming months, we expect to plan and initiate additional drilling to demonstrate the mineral expansion potential of Goldboro.”

The Goldboro project is said to contain a Measured and Indicated Mineral Resource of 457,400 gold ounces at a grade of 5.57 grams per tonne gold and an Inferred Mineral Resource of 372,900 gold ounces at a grade of 4.35 g/t gold.

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Colombian First Nations protest illegal mining on their traditional territories

Members of four Colombian First Nations occupied a mine called La Cantera La Peña de Horeb, in the northern Cesar department, to protest against its illegal operations.

The protesters’ allegations were confirmed by the department’s environmental authority, whose representatives said they were going to press charges against Explominerales de la Costa S.A. for unrightfully extracting sand and gravel in the area.

Although satisfied with the decision, the Indigenous groups also demanded urgent action against other 160 mines whose activities -they say- are contaminating rivers, ravines and the Ciénaga Grande de Santa Marta, the country’s largest swampy marsh.

Jaime Arias, from the Kankuama Nation, told El Heraldo that 36 rivers are born at the Sierra Nevada glaciers and it saddens him to see them getting polluted. “Those rivers are in charge of regulating the Caribbean region’s temperature and water availability. We would like for both the government and the civil society to help us protect our sacred territory, which is now threatened.”

Arias and his counterparts from the Arhuaca, Kogui, and Wiwa Nations demanded that authorities enforce a ban on illegal mining and follow a consultation process with Indigenous communities before granting new mining permits.

In response to their demands, Colombia’s General Attorney and a few judges from the Constitutional Court will host a public audience this Tuesday. Beyond the situation with mining, they want local authorities and First Nations leaders to discuss issues around human rights violations and land claims in the region.

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Nebraska governor says NioCorp’s Elk Creek a 'high-priority' project

Shares in US miner NioCorp Developments (TSX:NB) climbed Monday almost 8% after it said the governor of the state of Nebraska had told the Trump Administration that the company’s Elk Creek project should be considered “high priority.”

In a letter to the White House, Pete Ricketts said that green-lighting Niocorp's huge superalloy project in southeast Nebraska could help the country produce American-made "super steels" for infrastructure projects across all 50 states.

"We need niobium, Mr. President, yet we don't mine a single pound of it in the US today," governor Pete Ricketts wrote. "Nebraska wants to change that, and as rapidly as possible."

According to Ricketts, Elk Creek — a former Molycorp project — the US needs niobium, as the metal is key for manufacturing High Performance Steel (HPS). Those super steels, he noted, are increasingly being used in highway bridges and in virtually all mega-steel infrastructure projects to reduce corrosion, lengthen lifespans, cut costs, and reduce environmental impacts.

“American-made HPS steel can help highway bridges last in excess of a century (…) We need niobium, Mr. President, yet we don't mine a single pound of it in the U.S. today.  Nebraska wants to change that, and as rapidly as possible,” Ricketts said in his message to President Donald Trump.

The letter comes in response to an executive order expediting environmental reviews and approvals for all infrastructure projects that can bring jobs and other benefits to the US.

Investors reacted positively to the news, with the stock trading 7.94% higher to 68 cents at 11:58AM ET.

Based on current forecasts, Niobium demand is going to surpass the supply capacity from the three existing producers — CBMM, Anglo American and IAMGOLD's Niobec.

According to NioCorp, its Elk Creek asset is the only primary niobium deposit in the US, and the highest-grade, large-tonnage currently undeveloped in North America.

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Barrick Gold, Tanzania begin talks to resolve Acacia Mining dispute

To say Acacia Mining (LON:ACA) is having a rough time in Tanzania is to underestimate the challenges the company, one of the largest gold producers in Africa, has been facing in the last few weeks.

The miner, Tanzania's No.1 gold producer, is in the midst of a bitter dispute with the Eastern African’s country’s government, which — among other things — has accused Acacia of tax evasion and illegal operations, served the firm with a $190-billion bill in fines and allegedly outstanding taxes, questioned staff and even blocked one of the firm’s senior executives last week from leaving the country.

World’s largest gold miner Barrick hopes to reach an agreement over both the claims against its subsidiary and the current ban on mineral concentrate exports.

The escalating conflict pushed world’s largest gold producer Barrick Gold (TSX, NYSE:ABX), which has a 64% stake in Acacia, to intervene by mediating in the tax dispute.

The Canadian gold miner said Monday it had formally begun talks high-rank Tanzania’s government officials to try solving the ongoing dispute between the country and Acacia, which denies all accusations.

The Tanzanian side in the talks is being led by Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister Palamagamba Kabudi and Barrick by its chief operating officer Richard Williams, according to a statement quoted by Reuters.

Barrick’s chairman John Thornton and President John Magufuli met in June in Dar es Salaam and agreed to discuss an export ban on gold and copper concentrates as well as “other issues” that have hit Acacia very hard, prompting a collapse of the stock value.

The news gave investors some hope, as Acacia’s shares were slightly up (+0.57%) to 175.40p in late trading in London at 4:27PM local time. The stock, however, has lost more than 67% of its value since the export ban came in effect in March this year. The situation is so delicate that the miner warned last week it would have to close its flagship Bulyanhulu mine by Sept. 30 if the prohibition is not lifted.

Acacia, which owns and operates Tanzania’s three major mines, is also facing a lawsuit in the UK from relatives of miners who died at North Mara. Law firm Deighton Pierce Glynn is acting on 10 cases, most of which relate to incidents since 2013, and one as recently as last year.

According to Tanzania’s official data, 65 civilians have been killed by police at North Mara for trespassing since 2006 and another 270 have been injured.

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Une colle chirurgicale inspirée de la bave de limace

Après avoir étudié les propriétés de la bave de limace, des chercheurs ont créé une glu à la fois solide et flexible qui pourrait recoller des plaies même en présence de sang. Elle s’est avérée efficace sur un cœur de cochon.

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Model 3 : la Tesla « abordable » est disponible

Les premières livraisons de la Tesla Model 3 ont débuté aux États-Unis. Le constructeur de voitures électriques mise sur ce modèle à 35.000 dollars (environ 29.800 euros) pour élargir sa base de clientèle. Mais le système d'options fera vite grimper l'addition.

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Upbeat China data sends iron ore flying, climbs the most in 8 months

Iron ore prices received a major boost Monday hitting its highest level in eight months after upbeat Chinese data showed its construction sector in July grew the most in almost four years.

Ore with 62% content in Qingdao jumped 7.2% to $73.70 a tonne, according to the Metal Bulletin, the highest price since April 11 and the largest one-day percentage gain since December 1, 2016.

From the recent low of $53.36 a tonne hit on June 13, iron ore is now up more than 38%

From the recent low of $53.36 a tonne hit on June 13, the benchmark price is now up more than 38% — an impressive return in a little over a month.

Today’s significant gain coincides with the release of the official sub-index for activity growth in China’s construction sector, which hit to 62.5 in July, the highest level for that measurement since late 2013.

It also comes among tougher and more frequent environmental inspections by Chinese regulators, which have many fearing it could dent steel production.

"Environmental inspections have caused great impact on iron ore prices. Production in some mines, processing plants and mills are being disrupted," an unnamed iron ore trader in Beijing told Reuters. "The whole supply chain has been affected by the inspections."

More to come…

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Venµs : un satellite franco-israélien pour observer la Terre

Depuis l’espace, la lutte contre le changement climatique prend plusieurs formes. Avec le satellite franco-israélien Venµs, il sera possible d'étudier la dynamique de la végétation pour la première fois. Une stratégie d’observation inédite pour répondre aux besoins des climatologues. Les...

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L'astronaute italien Paolo Nespoli a rejoint l'ISS

Pas de vacances pour les astronautes et cosmonautes de la Station spatiale internationale (ISS). Ce weekend, trois nouveaux membres d'équipage ont rejoint le complexe orbital, dont Paolo Nespoli, un astronaute italien de l'Agence spatiale européenne (ESA). Doublure de Thomas Pesquet lors de la...

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dimanche 30 juillet 2017

Des vagues de lave géantes sur Io, une lune de Jupiter

Le volcanisme de Io, l'une des lunes de Jupiter, est sans commune mesure avec celui qui a lieu sur Terre actuellement. Comme nous l'explique l'astrophysicien Franck Marchis, membre de l'institut Seti, on a de bonnes raisons de penser qu'il existe sur Io un lac de lave d'environ 200 km de...

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NGO brings out legal gold from the Congo

In the DRC (Democratic Republic of the Congo) nearly all the gold is mined by artisinal miners whose mining practices are dangerous and uncontrolled.

According to the International Peace Information Service, about $28 billion worth of gold lies underground in eastern Congo, but 98% of it leaves the country illegally.

Last week however the efforts of a new group aiming to move legally mined gold out of the DRC came to fruition.

According to the CBC, Joanne Lebert, executive director of Partnership Africa Canada (PAC), brought 238 grams of gold purchased from mines near the remote town of Mambasa. The PAC says the gold was one of the first legal gold purchases from the Congo. It will be sent to a jewellery store in Toronto that makes fair-trade gold jewellery.

In May the Ottawa-based NGO announced it had successfully implemented a system to trace legal and conflict-free artisanal gold in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

 

The Just Gold project creates incentives for artisanal gold miners to channel their product to legal exporters—and eventually responsible consumers—by offering fair and transparent pricing and by providing capacity-building, such as technical assistance to miners in return for legal sales. Miners are taught better exploitation techniques and offered Just Gold project equipment, in return for which any gold produced must be tracked and sold through legal channels.

“Proving that artisanal gold in eastern Congo can be conflict-free, legal and traceable is a major step in responsible sourcing efforts in the Great Lakes region. The government of Democratic Republic of Congo is taking major strides in complying with regional standards and demonstrating how the implementation the OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains can contribute to progressive improvements in the sector, supporting artisanal gold men and women miners to enter international markets,” Lebert said in a press release.

Partnership Africa Canada signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the Democratic Republic of Congo’s Minister of Mines Martin Kabwelulu on September 2016, outlining support for the organization’s activities to strengthen natural resource governance. Specifically, the Ministry of Mines recognized the Just Gold project as a system of traceability and encouraged its implementation.

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Mining jobs in Canada to go begging: MiHR report

A torrent of retirements over the next 10 years is poised to wreak havoc on the mining labour market in Canada.

While the unemployment rate in mining, quarrying and oil and gas has improved in 2017 from the summer of 2016 – from 10% to 7% – the next decade is going to be challenging for the industry as it seeks to replace older workers who are turning in their coveralls and enjoying their golden years. So says a new report from the Mining Industry Human Resources Council (MiHR), which projects 87,830 workers will need to be hired over the next decade under a baseline scenario. If mining expands, the need for miners and associated professions climbs to 130,410, and under a contraction, shrinks to 43,200.

"One of the most significant challenges facing Canada’s mining industry is establishing a sustainable supply of labour that is able to withstand the economic volatility that characterizes the sector": Mining Industry Human Resources Council report 

"One of the most significant challenges facing Canada’s mining industry is establishing a sustainable supply of labour that is able to withstand the economic volatility that characterizes the sector," notes the report. The report suggests that there will be an 47% gap (demand exceeds supply) for technical occupations, 56% for supervisor and foremen, 18% for skilled trades and 10% for production workers.

According to MiHR’s forecasts, the industry will need to hire roughly 18,210 people in these occupations from 2018 to 20127, but is only expected to secure 8,670 new entrants, leaving a total gap of 9,540 – meaning about half of all vacancies will go unfilled.

"This poses a significant risk to mining operations, given that a thin labour supply has the potential to derail projects, drive up the cost of finding workers and ultimately undermine an operation’s ability to run competitively," reads an executive summary of the report.

That obviously calls for a new generation in mining, with key education programs needed to improve the labour supply.

“The incoming generation of new entrants are vitally important to the health of mining’s future labour supply, especially prospective students,” says the report.

It noted nearly half (47%) of hiring requirements will be met by retiring workers, which places a significant burden on employers.

"Each retiree takes with them a unique set of skills and knowledge, and those leaving with experience create a void that is difficult to fill," says MiHR.

Factors exacerbating the tight mining labour market include:

  • Age and retirement: Older workers have surged from 11 per cent in 2007 to 16 per cent in 2016, while younger workers have dropped from 13 per cent to 5 per cent over that same period.
  • Lack of gender parity: While women represent nearly half of the Canadian labour force, they make up only about 19 per cent of the labour force in mining.
  • Economic volatility: economic downturns and upswings result in widely fluctuating demand for labour and this instability can affect a mining employer’s ability to secure labour.
  • Remoteness: Mining operations often exist in remote parts of the country with extremely low populations lacking skills. It is common for employers to source workers from other regions of Canada.

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Six contractors die at illegal gold mine in Colombia

An explosion at an illegal gold mine in Colombia has killed six security contractors who were working for Continental Gold (TSX:CNL).

The contractors were performing routine inspections of a closed underground mine, away from the company's Buriticá project, when an explosion occurred, Continental said on Saturday. The contractors died from apparent asphyxiation.

The incident occurred on Friday evening, according to the statement:

Upon entering the underground mine, the Contractors were accosted by illegal miners, followed by a subsequent explosion. A seventh Contractor managed to escape and immediately notified all relevant authorities. Rescue efforts were led by the ANM (National Mining Agency of Colombia, the top mining authority under the Ministry of Mines) and DAPARD (the government´s disaster recovery agency), with assistance from Continental. The Company has urged local communities, the State Government of Antioquia and the National Government to unite on this tragedy and pursue all legal means under the law to bring the perpetrators to justice.

Continental Gold did not say how the explosion happened. The Colombian government has made it a priority to work with state and local governments in Antioquia to permanently close illegal mines however some continue to operate.

Nine days ago about 10,000 artisinal miners operating in northern Antioquia started a general strike – part of a series of actions that began back in September 2016, when artisanal miners decided to oppose expansion plans by Zandor Capital, a subsidiary of Canada-based Gran Colombia Gold (TSX:GCM).

The miners are also rallying against Bill 169 from 2016 whose goal, they say, is to eradicate artisanal mining.

Protesters also reject Decree 142 enacted by the Ministry of Mining and Energy on September 1, 2016, which requires small processing plants to obtain a registration with the Colombian government and an environmental license, and to only process and sell gold with a proper certificate of origin.

On June 23 13 coal miners died in Colombia after an explosion at an illegal coal mine.

Continental Gold is developing the advanced-stage Buriticá project, which had a feasibility study done on it in 2016. The proposed gold-silver mine hosts proven and probable reserves of 3.71 million gold ounces and 10.72 million ounces of silver.

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Ça fait peur : on peut s’ennuyer de cinq manières différentes

Des chercheurs en psychologie ont défini une nouvelle forme d’ennui, inconnue jusqu’à présent, qui s’ajoute aux quatre déjà identifiées. Zoom sur ces cinq façons de s’ennuyer.

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samedi 29 juillet 2017

Science décalée : pourquoi les doigts se fripent-ils dans l’eau ?

Bien souvent, les enfants demandent pourquoi leurs doigts se fripent lorsqu’ils prennent un bain. Les parents pourront enfin leur apporter une réponse : ce serait pour mieux agripper les objets humides. Des explications plus ou moins convaincantes…

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Incendies de forêt : des saisons plus longues et plus fréquentes

Portugal, Sud de la France. Une fois de plus cet été, les feux de forêt sont au cœur de l'actualité. Et à en croire les scientifiques, les choses pourraient aller en s'empirant. Il y a deux ans déjà, en effet, après avoir analysé 35 ans de données sur les périodes propices aux incendies dans le...

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vendredi 28 juillet 2017

Concern in Mexico over gold exploration near nuclear plant

Environmentalists and community members expressed concerns after the Mexican government announced that Candelaria Mining was allowed to continue exploration at its Caballo Blanco gold project, located 65 kilometers northwest of the city of Veracruz.

The district-scale project consists of 14 contiguous mining claims that cover 19,815 hectares. It sits close to Mexico’s only nuclear power plant.

Talking to the news outlet ElRegio.com, physicist Bernardo Salas Mar, who is also a former employee of the Laguna Verde nuclear plant, said that authorities acted in an irresponsible way when they approved Candelaria’s activities. “Nuclear plants must be built in areas with low population density and where no industrial, fishing, agricultural, or livestock activities take place. Allowing a miner to operate there is absurd. This might entangle the objectives of the External Radiological Emergency Plan,” he said (in Spanish).

Since Caballo Blanco is an advanced-stage open-pit, heap leach gold mine, Salas Mar said that once explosions start to take place, the nearby nuclear reactors are likely to fail. “That’s the reason why the Secretary of Hydraulic Resources refused to allow the building of a dam in Laguna Verde’s mountains,” he added.

At the moment, Candelaria has mobilized a drill rig and initiated drilling on a 2,000-meter program of infill drilling at the northern La Paila zone. Seven holes are planned in this area which will seek to confirm the resource model and provide tighter drill spacing in some areas of the resource.

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American Manganese completes recycling of 100% of cathode materials

American Manganese (TSX.V: AMY; FRANK: 2AM) announced that it has successfully completed the recycling of 100% of cathode materials (Co, Ni, Mn, Al) and 92% of lithium from its US Patent Pending recycling application.

In a press release, CEO Larry Reaugh said that the company has also produced rechargeable lithium-ion cobalt and lithium nickel manganese button cell batteries from that recycled cathode material.

“Management has been studying ways to capitalize on the company’s technologies working toward developing positive cash flow. One such opportunity may exist in recycling unused cathodes. Industry sources have shown that up to 10% of manufactured lithium ion battery cathodes are rejected for use. The rejected cathodes, termed ‘scrap,’ consist of the aluminum foil backing and the cathode metal powder which we believe can be recycled into usable cathode material using AMI’s patent-pending process,” Reaugh explained.

The monetary values (per 500 kg) of the metals recovered from electric vehicle lithium ion batteries are $5,947 for lithium cobalt, $2,347.00 for nickel manganese cobalt, and $1,585.00 for nickel cobalt aluminum.

The numbers show a ‘significant increase’ in post-consumer electric vehicle battery value, compared to January of 2017. This is due, according to American Manganese's CEO, to the increase in the price of cobalt from $35.02 to $58.50/kg over the past six months.

“Cobalt is currently under severe supply side pressure, and is expected to remain undersupplied. According to the Cobalt Development Institute the battery industry consumes 41% of global cobalt supply. Over the next ten years, that usage is expected to increase to above 65%,” Reaugh said and added that such increase in anticipated demand, will result in recycling being an important part of the supply solution to an emerging cobalt shortage.

The executive also announced that in early 2018, the company intends to build and begin operating a hydrometallurgical plant to prove continuous recovery of cathode material. The plant will be able to recycle up to 4000 tons of cobalt from spent lithium-ion batteries each year – with a market value of over US$ 230 million.

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New research could make it easier to find high-quality Canadian sapphires

Researchers from the University of British Columbia’s Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences discovered that it takes a fairly specific sequence of pressure and temperature events to create Beluga sapphires in Nunavut.

“It’s essentially a recipe,” said Graduate Student Philippe Belley, lead author of a study that was published this week in the journal Canadian Mineralogist.

Belley explained in a press release that once he and his colleagues discovered what chain of events from Earth’s history was required to form sapphires in marble-related deposits on Baffin Island, they compared that information to regional data to pinpoint the most promising areas for sapphire exploration.

Those areas are expected to occur near a fault that separates the Lake Harbour Group and Narsajuaq terranes.

According to UBC mineralogist and expert on gem deposits Lee Groat, the new findings not only will facilitate gemstone exploration in that specific section of the Arctic but can be also applied to exploration in other parts of the world.

Beluga sapphires, specifically 48 of them, are the gems that adorn Queen Elizabeth II’s Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch. The piece also has 400 diamonds from northern Canada, all set in Canadian white gold.

The gems in the brooch were discovered near Kimmirut, Baffin Island, by brothers Nowdluk and Seemeega Aqpik in 2002. That location is Canada’s only known deposit of sapphires.

Canada's Governor General presented Queen Elizabeth with the Sapphire Jubilee Snowflake Brooch on July 19, 2017. The brooch celebrates The Queen’s Sapphire Jubilee. Photo by Sgt Johanie Maheu, Rideau Hall.

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Breakthrough Starshot : les plus petits satellites du monde sont en orbite

Breakthrough Starshot, le projet qui vise à atteindre le système d'Alpha du Centaure avec une sonde interstellaire miniature pour y découvrir l’exoplanète Proxima b, vient de franchir une étape cruciale. Six nanosatellites, les plus petits jamais lancés, sont désormais en orbite basse autour de...

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L'incroyable vol du colibri en vidéo

Pour tenter de percer les secrets du colibri, petit oiseau magnifique peuplant différentes régions d’Amérique, des scientifiques l'ont filmé en laboratoire avec des caméras ultrarapides. Les images montrent une créature fascinante dotée de capacités hors norme.

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Glencore acquires half of former Rio coal mine in Australia

Following a bidding race where the company initially lost, Glencore (LON:GLEN) was finally able to put its hands on Rio Tinto’s (ASX, LON:RIO) former coal assets in Australia's Hunter Valley, located in the New South Wales region.

The Anglo–Swiss multinational announced that it signed agreements with Yancoal Australia (ASX:YAL), a subsidiary of China’s Yanzhou Coal Mining, regarding the acquisition of a 49 per cent interest in the Hunter Valley Operations coal mine and forming a joint venture following Yancoal’s acquisition of Rio’s Coal & Allied unit for $2.69 billion.

In detail, Glencore will buy out Mitsubishi, which owns 32 per cent of the mine, and acquire a further 16.6 per cent from Yancoal. Once the latter completes its acquisition of the Coal & Allied unit, the European giant will be entitled to its share of the profits of the Hunter Valley Operations.

Glencore, who first tried and failed to buy Coal & Allied in 2015 because it owns several other assets in the surrounding areas, has also agreed to subscribe for $300 million worth of shares in Yancoal’s equity raising. This means that Yanzhou’s subsidiary will not have to gather as much money as expected to close the transaction.

The backing also implies that Glencore gets to choose the management team that will run the mines and that it will also have the rights to market the coal in Japan, South Korea, and all other countries, excluding China, Taiwan (with certain exclusions), Thailand and Malaysia.

From now on, Glencore’s combined portfolio of mines in the Hunter Valley will have a production capacity of 69 million metric tons per year of high-quality energy coal which, the company states, is aimed at meeting Asia’s increasing demand.

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Un étrange dinosaure autruche découvert en Chine

Un nouveau dinosaure, cousin proche de l'oviraptor, a été découvert et décrit par des paléontologues chinois. Baptisé Corythoraptor jacobsi, il devait probablement ressembler aux casoars d'Australie et de Nouvelle-Guinée.

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La Nuit des étoiles sous le signe des terres habitables

La Nuit des étoiles 2017 se déroulera ce weekend, du 28 au 30 juillet. Elle aura pour fil conducteur les « terres habitables ». De nombreuses manifestations (conférences, observation du ciel étoilé) sont organisées partout en France. Partez à la découverte du ciel de l’été.

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Nous serions en partie des poussières d'étoiles d'autres galaxies

Selon des simulations numériques, jusqu'à la moitié des noyaux d'atomes qui composent la matière de la Voie lactée, donc nous y compris, proviendraient en fait d'autres galaxies voisines. Ils auraient été éjectés par le souffle des supernovae.

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jeudi 27 juillet 2017

Vieillissement : l'hypothalamus au cœur du processus

Régulation de la température corporelle, sensation de faim ou de soif : au cœur de notre cerveau, l’hypothalamus joue un rôle essentiel, peut-être encore plus qu’on ne le pensait jusqu’à maintenant. Des chercheurs américains affirment en effet aujourd’hui qu'il intervient dans le...

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Australian Mines creates COO role to advance cobalt-scandium-nickel projects

Australian Mines (AU:AUZ) announced the appointment of nickel veteran Tim Maclean to the newly created role of Chief Operating Officer, in a move aimed at advancing its Sconi cobalt-nickel-scandium project in Queensland, which is currently undergoing a bankable feasibility study.

Total scandium resource at Sconi is calculated in 12 million tonnes at 162 ppm scandium for 2,989 tonnes of scandium oxide. On the other hand, the combined nickel and cobalt mineral resource is 89 million tonnes at 0.58% nickel + 0.06 % cobalt for 514,000 tonnes of contained nickel metal and 54,000 tonnes of contained cobalt metal.

Mclean is also expected to play a vital role in the preparation of the company’s pre-feasibility study for its Flemington cobalt-scandium-nickel project in New South Wales, which is scheduled to start in October 2017 following reports on the results from a resource extension drilling program and a mineral resource estimate.

In a press release, Australian Mines stated that Maclean has more than 25 years of senior management and hands-on technical and production experience in the mining industry.

The new COO has been in charge of several major projects, such as building from scratch the US$3 billion Mineraçao Onça Puma nickel laterite processing plant in Brazil for Vale (BZ:VALE5); managing Inco’s Indonesian nickel laterite operations, which has an annual average output of 169 million pounds of nickel; and running Rio Tinto’s (LN:RIO) Palabora copper smelter and refinery in South Africa, which produces around 120,000 tonnes of copper metal per year.

Australian Mines also highlighted Mclean’s success in his most recent position running Alcoa‘s (US:AA) Kwinana aluminum refinery, which produces over $1 billion of specialty alumina products per year and has been praised for its safety and environmental record.

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Cameco misses with -11 cents a share adjusted loss in Q2

Cameco missed on the bottom line with a reported -$0.11/share adjusted loss compared to a consensus of -$0.03/share in its 2Q financial released today.

Cameco had net losses of $2 million and adjusted net losses of $44 million.

Cameco attributed the loss largely to the impact from the TEPCO contract cancellation, a change in the Saskatchewan corporate tax rate which impacted the deferred tax asset, and the write-down in value of NUKEM’s inventory. A revenue beat of $470M topped both our and consensus estimates totaling $409M and $383M, respectively, on higher than forecast uranium delivery volumes.

“We continue to face difficult market conditions, with the average year-to-date uranium spot price down 13% compared to the 2016 average. Our weaker outlook for 2017 compared to 2016 reflects the low uranium prices and the effects of the actions we have taken to address them. These actions are part of a very deliberate and disciplined strategy to strengthen the company in the long term,” said president and CEO, Tim Gitzel.

Cameco listed some of its cost cutting.

"For the first six months of the year, the average unit cost of sales (including depreciation and amortization) in our uranium segment was down 15%, our cash production costs were down 23%, exploration costs were down 41%, and direct administration costs were down 28%. Our planned capital expenditures for 2017 are also 20% lower than in 2016," said Gitzel.

With material from Cantor Fitzgerald's research note.

Creative Commons image by Mark Goebel

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Anglo American takes a charge of US$101M due to silicosis legal action

Anglo American has set aside US$101M to settle legal action from a group that allegedly contracted silicosis or tuberculosis as a result of having worked for various gold mining companies including some in which Anglo American was either a shareholder or provided various technical and administrative services.

Anglo American is one of 32 respondents to the consolidated class certification.

About a year ago South Africa's high court ruled that mine workers could claim damages for contracting silicosis. The defendants are appealing the ruling with a hearing planned for March 2018.

Anglo and the other respondents are negotiating with the affected stakeholders. The charge of US$101 million represents the company's best guess as to the ultimate settlement.

Details of the charge are found on page 49 of the company's 2017 interim financial results.

Creative Commons image of wall mural in South Africa from Guillaume Inconito

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Rio Tinto unveils its largest red diamond

Rio Tinto’s Argyle mine, located in the remote East Kimberley region of Western Australia, produces enough gems to allow the company to host annual showcases of its rarest diamonds.

This year, the first exhibition took place at a Chelsea skyscraper in New York in front of a selected group of collectors and connoisseurs. The star of the night? The Argyle Everglow, a 2.11 carat polished radiant cut diamond that was assessed by the Gemological Institute of America as a notable diamond with a grade of Fancy Red VS2.

According to a press release, in the 33-year history of the Argyle Pink Diamonds Tender -as the show is called- there have been less than 20 carats of Fancy Red certified diamonds sold.

The price of the Everglow, however, was not disclosed. Still, The New York Times reports that the record auction price for a fancy red diamond is $5 million, paid three years ago in Hong Kong.

In total, there were 58 diamonds in the 2017 Tender weighing a total of 49.39 carats. Among them, there were four Fancy Red diamonds, four Purplish Red diamonds, two Violet diamonds, and one Blue diamond.

Argyle pink diamonds

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Uranium to stay weak for now but a 'violent price increase' is coming: Cantor

Cantor Fitzgerald forecasts $22.14 spot uranium price for 2017 due to Kazakh producers being slow to implement planned production cuts.

"While a 10% reduction was guided by the state-owned organization [Kazatomprom] that by law has an ownership stake in every uranium mine in the country, we suspect that some operators may have dragged their feet in implementing these curtailments," writes Cantor in a research note.

Cantor says that these prices are unsustainable and notes that some producers are buying from the spot market since to fulfill their deliveries since it is cheaper to buy in the market than to produce.

Another factor depressing prices is secondary supply.

"We currently estimate secondary supplies of about 48M lbs of U3O8 with 22M lbs coming from Russian sources such as enrichment providers via underfeeding. Our conversations with several industry participants leads us to expect continued high levels coming from Russia for at least through 2018."

However, the research firm is optimistic over the long term.

"Our long-term price remains at US$80/lb, which begins in 2022, as we continue to believe that the supply and demand fundamentals of uranium will lead to a violent price increase, albeit further into the future than initially expected. We view US$80/lb as the long-term equilibrium price level that will incentivize production from the large, low grade African uranium mines, whose production we believe is necessary for future supply and demand to balance."

Creative Commons image of the Abai Kazakh State Academic opera by Torekhan Sarmanov

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Teck's steelmaking business jumps from $52M to $785M in 2Q

Teck ( NYSE:TECK) reported a profit of $577 million ($1.00 per share) in the second quarter compared with $15 million ($0.03 per share) a year ago largely thanks to its metallurgical coal business.

The Canadian integrated miner said that its gross profit in the second quarter from its steelmaking coal business unit was $785 million compared with $52 million a year ago.

The average realized steelmaking coal price of US$169 per tonne was US$86 per tonne higher than the second quarter of 2016, reflecting improved steelmaking coal market conditions and supply constraints in the quarter due to a cyclone in Queensland. The company achieved second quarter production of 6.8 million tonnes, slightly higher than the same period a year ago, but off the company's forecast 7.0 million tonnes.

"This was the result of our decision to advance annual processing plant maintenance shutdowns, originally planned for later in the year, into the second quarter," said Teck in news release.

Commodity prices were up markedly for Teck. The company reported that prices moved higher year-over-year with copper, zinc and lead prices rising 20%, 35%, and 26% in U.S. dollars, respectively, from the same period a year ago.

Copper gross profit was $128 million compared with $62 million a year ago. Copper production declined by 23% from a year ago primarily due to lower ore grades at Highland Valley Copper as anticipated in the mine plan.

Teck's gross profit from its zinc business unit was $153 million in the second quarter compared with $99 million a year ago.

Creative Commons image by Josh

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Lucky Minerals allowed to explore for gold near Yellowstone National Park

The Montana Department of Environmental Quality released the results of a months-long evaluation of Canada’s Lucky Minerals (CVE:LJ) exploration plans in an area north of Yellowstone National Park.

Following such assessment, state officials decided to issue a license to the Vancouver-based company, whose idea is to explore for copper, gold, and silver in an area located within the privately-owned St. Julian mine claim block, in the Emigrant Mining District.

The decision comes after the agency reviewed 3,384 comments from individuals, organizations, and agencies, many of which opposed the miner’s activities in the area fearing they might negatively impact the tourism industry and pollute the nearby Yellowstone River.

However, government representatives said the company agreed to extensive water quality and wildlife monitoring plans. “The exploration license issued by DEQ will reflect the proposed exploration activity set forth in Lucky Minerals’ exploration license application, as modified by the mitigations measures contained in the Agency Modified Alternative,” the decision reads.

Lucky Minerals paid homage to its name as it wasn’t affected by a 2016 decision by the Obama administration, which banned new mining claims on 30,000 acres of U.S. Forest Service land near Yellowstone’s northern entrance.

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La pierre de rosette numérisée en 3D

Le British Museum met à la disposition du grand public une version numérique en 3D de la fameuse pierre de Rosette. L'occasion d'observer sous toutes les coutures cette stèle millénaire, sésame de la traduction des hiéroglyphes de l'Égypte antique.

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Artisanal miners’ strike impacts Colombian town

Local businesses have joined a general strike started six days ago by at least 10,000 artisanal and ancestral miners operating in the Colombian towns of Segovia and Remedios, located in the northern Antioquia department.

The action has left many residents, used to buy groceries for the day, struggling to find food and supplies.

Remedios Mayor Lucía Carvajal told El Tiempo newspaper that a huge chunk of the population “didn’t have enough money to stock themselves at the local stores and they are currently facing a very difficult situation.”

Carvajal also said that even though roads are not blocked, inter-municipal buses are not going in or out of Segovia and Remedios.

The general strike is part of a series of actions that began back in September 2016, when artisanal miners decided to oppose expansion plans by Zandor Capital, a subsidiary of Canadian-based Gran Colombia Gold.

However, they are also rallying against Bill 169 from 2016 whose goal, they say, is to eradicate artisanal mining.

Protesters also reject Decree 142 enacted by the Ministry of Mining and Energy on September 1, 2016, which requires small processing plants to obtain a registration with the Colombian government and an environmental license, and to only process and sell gold with a proper certificate of origin.

By publication time, the Mining Table was holding a meeting with officials from the Federal Government, Gran Colombia Gold, Antioquia’s Ministries of Interior and Mines, the Office of the Attorney General and the Office of the Ombudsman.

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Découvrez la plus grande flotte de microsatellites au monde

En orbite autour de notre planète, tourne la plus grande constellation de très petits satellites dédiés à l'observation de la Terre. Conçue et opérée par la société Planet, cette constellation est peu connue du grand public. Pourtant, elle permet une vision inédite, en temps quasi réel, de...

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La qualité du sperme des Occidentaux continue de baisser

La concentration en spermatozoïdes du sperme a baissé de 52,4 % entre 1973 et 2011 chez les hommes occidentaux tandis que la quantité totale de sperme a chuté de 59,3 %, selon une méta-analyse scrutant 50 pays.

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Antivirus gratuit : Kaspersky Free s'attaque à Windows Defender

L'éditeur de solutions de sécurité Kaspersky vient de lancer une version gratuite de son logiciel antivirus pour Windows. Une pierre dans le jardin de Microsoft et de son logiciel de sécurité Windows Defender, dont Kaspersky conteste le monopole.

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Si la Terre est habitable, serait-ce grâce aux volcans ?

Les quantités de gaz carbonique dans l'atmosphère et l'océan sont contrôlées par le cycle du carbone, qui dépend de plusieurs paramètres. Les données provenant des émissions de ce gaz à effet de serre au niveau des arcs volcaniques suggèrent qu'il faut revoir l'influence des volcans sur ce cycle...

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mercredi 26 juillet 2017

This company can help decarbonize your mine

The Rocky Mountain Institute, an organization focused on promoting profitable innovations for energy and resource efficiency, just published a report outlining what its researchers consider to be a feasible path toward sustainable mining.

The document, authored by Paolo Natali and Kevin Haley, reveals how extractive activities don’t necessarily have to be carbon-intensive, regardless of how high the energy demand of mining sites is. According to the International Energy Agency, the energy used by the mining industry represents 1.25 per cent of the world’s total energy consumption, which was 110,000 TWh in 2014 (or 375 quadrillion Btu).

“On-site renewable energy solutions for mining installations are becoming increasingly attractive to serve a significant portion of electricity load,” Natali and Haley write. “Approximately 32 per cent of the energy consumed at a typical mine is in the form of electricity, which can either be generated on site or supplied through a grid connection. The remainder of the energy consumption is fossil fuel based, primarily in mobile equipment with diesel engines (drills, shovels, trucks, etc.).”

On-site renewable energy solutions for mining installations are becoming increasingly attractive to serve a significant portion of electricity load.

In industrialized countries, many mines are connected to an electricity grid but that’s not the case in developing countries. In both contexts, however, energy needs have to be factored in either in terms of making use of the existing infrastructure without overloading it or having to build new plants.

A third way to approach this situation while reducing costs, the RMI report states, is by building a new off-grid facility with solar energy. “The key to unlocking viable low-carbon energy systems for mines has largely been the dramatic reduction in cost for renewable energy technologies and, to a lesser extent, battery and storage systems. Since 2009, the global levelized cost of energy (LCOE) for onshore wind has dropped by 66 per cent, and global solar LCOE has dropped by 85 per cent.”

According to the study, even if battery storage (which addresses issues with intermittency and night time load) is not available, a mine functioning with solar energy during the day and switching to fossil fuels in the evening would still reduce its energy costs and carbon footprint. “Additionally, renewables bring benefits in terms of reduced risk exposure to the global oil market and diesel supply chain.”

The authors provide more details as to how wind and solar have become cost-competitive when compared to fossil fuel-generated electricity. For example, “mining operators can lock in prices, either via on-site generation or long-term power purchase agreements (PPAs), at costs competitive with fossil fuel generation for as long as 25 years. The hedge against fuel cost volatility may be reason enough alone to consider renewables from an economic perspective.”

If they decide to build on-site generation plants, miners would see additional benefits to those of the reduction in their electricity bill and emissions. They would also gain social license.

“By serving a dual purpose to meet the needs of the mine and surrounding communities, renewable energy at mining sites can generate additional positive benefits in terms of social responsibility and community investment. This is, of course, in addition to the economic and environmental benefits of on-site renewable energy generation: providing the mine cheaper and cleaner forms of generation and using the local grid as a balancing tool that can offtake excess renewable generation and provide backup dispatchable generation at times of high load,” the RMI report concludes.

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Un noyau exotique avec 4 neutrons, c'est possible !

Des calculs théoriques accréditent l'idée que le laboratoire japonais Riken aurait bien observé la création d'un noyau exotique recherché depuis des décennies : le tétraneutron. Du travail reste encore à faire pour parler d'une vraie découverte.

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Fresnillo silver, gold output jumps on San Julian ramp up, higher ores

Mexico-focused precious metals miner Fresnillo (LON:FRES) said Wednesday it’s on track to deliver 2017 guidance thanks to higher silver and gold output in the second quarter of the year.

The company, which is the world's largest primary silver producer and Mexico's second-largest gold miner, said silver output in the three months to the end of June was 14.5 million ounces, 12% more than in the same period last year and up 7.3% from the first quarter of 2017.

Silver production in Q2 totalled 14.5 million ounces, a 12% rise from last year, while gold output was 223,000 ounces, up 2.7% from a year earlier.

In the first six months of the year, Fresnillo saw its silver output climb by 11% to 28 million ounces.

Production of gold in the quarter rose 2.7% from a year earlier to 233,000 ounces, boosted by a combination of the start of operations at San Julian, higher ore processed at Fresnillo and higher ore grade at Cienega.

The miner said it’s confident it will produce between 58 and 61 million ounces of silver this year, while gold output is expected to be in the 870,000 to 900,000 ounces range.

The guidance is comparable to Fresnillo’s results in 2016, when it produced record silver volumes of 50 million ounces and gold volumes totalling 935,500 ounces, which exceeded its own expectations for that year.

Shares in the company were trading up 1.94% to 1,533 close to the end of Wednesday trading session in London.

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Religious leaders occupy Australia’s environment minister's office to protest Adani’s coal mine

Australian environmentalists have been protesting for months now against Adani Group’s $16bn Carmichael coal mine and rail project to be built in the Galilee Basin, located in central Queensland.

This week, eight religious leaders added their voices to those of activists opposing the project. But they are doing more than just chanting slogans. They decided to occupy the electorate office of Josh Frydenberg, Australia’s Environment Minister, and they are vowing to stay there until the official withdraws his support for the mine.

People rejecting what would be one of the world’s largest thermal coal mines say it could potentially harm the Great Barrier Reef and vulnerable species including a lizard known as the yakka skink and the black-throated finch.

Earlier this year, Christian, Buddhist, and Jewish leaders penned an open letter where they blasted Adani and asked Frydenberg to reevaluate the plan. However, according to Rabbi Keren-Black, the Minister didn’t respond to their petitions and that’s why they decided to take action.

“We do not feel that the response has been sufficient,” Keren-Black told The Guardian.

As the first day of occupation was taking place inside the minister’s office, outside about a dozen religious leaders were holding a symbolic “funeral for coal.” Participants from various faiths presented eulogies and ended up saying that it is now “time to leave it in the ground.”

Carmichael hasn’t had an easy ride. In addition to court challenges that have cost more than $120 million and ongoing rallies led by the Stop Adani Alliance, the company faced a step-back in March when Australia’s four biggest banks ruled out or withdrew funding from the project.

Official figures estimate that the mine will contribute $2.97bn each year to Queensland’s economy and has the potential to create 6,400 new jobs. The mine is expected to produce 60 million tonnes of thermal coal a year for export, which would fuel power generation for 100 million Indians.

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Here’s how to avoid being caught in mining scams

Calling a class “bullshit,” and in public, would normally be considered inappropriate, but there’s one where students can get away with it.

Two University of Washington professors are teaching a course to help learners “think critically about the data and models that constitute evidence in the social and natural sciences,” according to the introduction to the course.

At the end of it, students should be able to “provide your crystals-and-homeopathy aunt or casually racist uncle with an accessible and persuasive explanation of why a claim is bullshit,” according to the syllabus.

These courses can help you identify and evaluate the risks involved in mining investments before it’s too late.

Simon Houlding, Vice-President of Professional Development for InfoMine Inc., and head of EduMine, the professional development division, believes the course could potentially be a useful tool for trying to make sense of mining news and reports.

Resource companies could benefit too, especially when it comes to monitoring and limiting financial and political risk associated to their operations and projects.

The course, also available online, might have even prevented investors from falling for some of the worst mining scams, such as Canada’s Bre-X Minerals, which shook Bay Street in the 1990s when its claims about an Indonesian gold find turned out to be fake, according to Houlding.

“Calling Bullshit in the Age of Big Data,” is not the only, nor the first course to deal with topics related to mining scams and the risk of investing in juniors. EduMine’s 360° Mining and An Introduction to Mining Investment – Understanding the Risks both provide in-depth information on how to identify and evaluate the risks involved in mining investments and hence make informed decisions about how and when to invest in a mine or mining company.

For more information and to register, please visit: http://ift.tt/2eN0fQd

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Le champ magnétique terrestre peut dire merci à la Lune

Le champ magnétique des planètes est produit par des mouvements de convection dans le noyau liquide. Mais d'où vient donc l'énergie nécessaire au maintien de ces mouvements ? Réponse : des forces de marée, aussi bien en ce qui concerne la Terre que certaines lunes du Système solaire.

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La voiture autonome de Google apprend à reconnaître les véhicules d'urgence

Waymo, la filiale d'Alphabet (maison-mère de Google) dédiée aux voitures autonomes, travaille à intégrer dans son intelligence artificielle (IA) la reconnaissance des véhicules d'urgence (ambulance, police, pompiers...) afin d'adopter la conduite adéquate.

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L'intelligence artificielle à la rescousse des satellites

Le flux des données fourni par les satellites est colossal. Grâce au big data et à l'intelligence artificielle, des chercheurs de l'Institut de recherche technologique Antoine de Saint-Exupéry sont arrivés à traiter ces données massives, permettant une meilleure observation de la Terre. Les...

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VIH : un vaccin expérimental contre le Sida montre des signes encourageants

Une étude à un stade encore préliminaire sur un vaccin contre le VIH a donné des résultats « encourageants », une note d’optimisme alors que la recherche a jusqu’ici échoué à mettre au point un vaccin efficace pour protéger de ce virus.

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mardi 25 juillet 2017

Copper price surges to 2-year high

Copper price surges to 2-year highCopper futures trading on the Comex market in New York surged on Tuesday on renewed optimism about demand from top metals consumer China and indications of tighter global mine supply of the red metal.

Copper for delivery in September jumped to a high of 2.8540 a pound ($6,292 tonne) in early afternoon trade, up 4.3% on yesterday's close to the highest since mid-May 2015. Copper's 2017 year to date gains in percentage terms now top 13% and is 28% higher than this time last year.

TC/RCs are a good indication of conditions in the spot market and rates have now fallen by 10% from the start of the year

While Chinese imports of refined copper dropped in June and is down 18% over the first half of 2017 to 2.23m tonnes, shipments of copper concentrate continue to strengthen jumping 23% in June from the month before to 1.41m tonnes. Another sign that primary copper supply is tightening treatment charges levied by smelters are falling back.

TC/RCs paid by mining companies are a good indication of conditions in the spot market and rates have now fallen by 10% from the start of the year to around $80 a tonne and are well below the price floor set by China's major refiners set as their price floor for the third quarter.

Supply disruptions at some of the world's biggest mines including BHP's Escondida mine in Chile earlier this year and ongoing strike action at Freeport McMoRan's Grasberg operations in Indonesia are also boosting the price.

Workers at Grasberg last week extended their strike for a fourth month to end August. Freeport's temporary exporting licence is coming up for renewal in October, a bargaining chip used by Jakarta as it negotiates with the Phoenix-based company about divesting a majority stake in its Indonesian subsidiary.

Shares in Freeport jumped more than 15% to a 16-month high on Tuesday after the $21.5 billion company announced revenues that topped estimates and progress on talks with the Indonesian government. Grasberg was forecast to produce 680,000 tonnes of copper this year making it the world's second largest copper mine after Escondida.

Shares in Freeport jumped more than 15% to a 16-month high on Tuesday after the $21.5 billion company announced revenues that topped estimates and progress on talks with the Indonesian government

Copper mining companies were trading higher across the board on Tuesday with world number three  producer Glencore rising 4% in London trading. Diversified giants BHP gained 3.7% in New York trading and Rio Tinto received a 5% bump. Gains were more modest for Southern Copper Corp at 3% while Poland's KGHM jumped 4.4%.

Beijing boost

The economy of China, responsible for nearly half the world's consumption of copper, expanded at an annual rate of 6.9% in the second quarter against expectations of a slight decline and at a quicker pace than Beijing's own target of 6.5% growth for 2017.

In seasonally-adjusted quarter on quarter terms, growth was even more significant, picking up from 1.3% to 1.7%. If the trend continues, this year would be the first time since 2010 that the Chinese economy grew faster than the year before.

Industrial production data for June released today also pointed to a significant improvement. Growth in industrial output picked up from 6.5% year on year to 7.6% led by greater electricity and steel production. Bloomberg consensus forecasts pointed to no acceleration for Chinese industrial output.

Despite Beijing's tightening of lending and other measures to cool the property market, construction starts  surged by more than 14% in June, providing further support for commodity-intensive sectors which continue to expand at a faster rate than the broader measure of industrial production.

The copper price is seen as a bellwether for metals markets and industry as a whole thanks to its widespread use in construction, the power sector, manufacturing and transportation.

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Caterpillar earnings beat estimates, shares hit five-year high

Shares in the world's largest mining and construction equipment maker Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT) jumped Tuesday, touching a five-year high in early trading, as the company posted better than expected earnings for the second quarter and bulldozed its way to another outlook upgrade.

Second-quarter revenues were up nearly $1 billion from a year ago, with earnings per share 40 cents higher as well.

CAT now expects adjusted earnings per share to come in at $5, significantly higher than the $3.75 it had forecast just three months ago and almost doubled the $2.90 it had originally projected for 2017.

In terms of full-year guidance, the Peoria, Illinois-based company now expects adjusted earnings per share to come in at $5, significantly higher than the $3.75 it had forecast just three months ago and almost doubled the $2.90 it had originally projected for the year.

Full year sales meanwhile will be between $42bn-$44bn, up from the $38bn-$41bn range it had previously penciled, driven by a continued rebound in mining and construction, the two key industries it serves.

"We anticipate making targeted investments in initiatives … including enhanced digital capabilities and accelerating technology updates to our products," CEO Jim Umpleby said in a statement.

As a global supplier of mining and construction equipment, Caterpillar is considered a reliable bellwether of economic activity.

That is why many were happy to hear the machinery giant is seeing improving demand, especially from the construction sector, in most regions.

Sales in North America, Caterpillar’s largest market, were up 7%, mostly due to recovering demand from the mining and energy industries.

In the Asia Pacific region, its third-biggest market, increased by 23% boosted by higher demand for construction equipment from China.

The machinery maker is going ahead with the planned move of its Peoria headquarters to the Chicago area, though most of the 12,000 manufacturing jobs will stay in Peoria, it said in April.

The company’s shares climbed 5% in pre-market trading and were still trading high (+4.7%) to $113.30 at 11:52 am in New York.

Watch Caterpillar Group President and Chief Financial Officer Brad Halverson discuss the company's second-quarter 2017 financial results:

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Fukushima : un robot a exploré le réacteur n° 3

Un petit robot long de 30 cm a nagé dans les eaux radioactives du réacteur n° 3 de Fukushima. Il aurait obtenu les premières images d’éléments composés de métal et de combustibles nucléaires ayant fondu lors de la catastrophe. Une étape importante dans le processus de...

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Kumba resumes divvy thanks to stronger iron ore prices in first half of 2017

Shares in Kumba Iron Ore (JSE:KIO) rallied Tuesday after the miner announced it would reinstate dividends after a two-year hiatus thanks to stronger prices for the steelmaking ingredient earlier this year.

Delivering first-half results, the South Africa-based company noted that more efficient production helped boost earnings in the period earnings by 53%.

The miner’s stock shot up on the news and was up almost 15% to 19,852 rand by 4:00PM in Johannesburg.

Anglo American (LON:AAL), which has a 69.7% stake in Kumba, also climbed and shares were trading more than 6% higher in London to 1,1710p at 3:420pm local time.

Kumba, Africa's largest iron ore producer, said that operating improvements combined with higher iron ore prices have driven a much stronger financial performance so far this year.

As a result, chief executive Themba Mkhwanazi announced the company was resuming an interim cash dividend payment of 15.97 rand per share as part of a plan to return excess cash to shareholders. Investors hadn’t received a divvy since 2015, when iron ore fell below $40 a tonne amid a global crash in commodity prices.

Ore with 62% content in China’s port of Qingdao added $1.62 a tonne on Tuesday, trading at $69.48, according to the Metal Bulletin. Prices will probably be lower in the second half of the year, Kumba’s chief financial officer Johan Prins warned on a call with reporters. The company also expects softer steel demand to weigh on second-half cash flow, which means Kumba will have a "discretionary policy" on dividends going forward.

"We are still conservative in our approach … We need to review the situation and the environment we are operating under," Mkhwanazi said.

The company also announced that Fani Titi, chairman of the board, will step down with on September 30 and that Mandla Gantsho has been appointed an independent director and chairman.

 

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La Lune contiendrait bien plus d'eau que prévu

Les données collectées par la sonde indienne Chandrayaan-1 ont permis l'analyse de la composition des roches volcaniques présentes à la surface de la Lune. Résultat : le manteau de notre satellite naturel contient de l'eau en importance alors que celle-ci devrait être en quantité négligeable du...

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Paint ne va pas disparaître assure Microsoft

Après l'émoi international causé par l'annonce d'un retrait du logiciel de dessin Paint, remplacé par Paint 3D, Microsoft a finalement indiqué que celui-ci n'allait pas disparaître totalement. Il ne sera plus installé par défaut avec Windows, mais toujours disponible en téléchargement depuis le...

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South Africa labour disputes weigh on Petra Diamonds results

Shares in Petra Diamonds (LON:PDL) fell Monday to close almost 6.3% lower after the company revealed it had missed production and revenue targets in the year to June 30, partly because labour disputes earlier this year caused delays in the building of a new plant in South Africa.

Petra has borrowed heavily to expand its historic diamond mines in South Africa, previously owned by top producer De Beers.

The diamond miner, known for some major recent findings, said that despite missing expectations, it was on track for a major increase in output next year, as the new processing plant at its Cullinan mine is now in full operations.

The delay meant the Africa-focused miner’s output increased 8% to 4 million carats, still below the company’s earlier forecast of 4.4 million for the first half of 2017.

Petra has borrowed heavily to expand its historic diamond mines in South Africa, previously owned by top producer De Beers. Net debt in the first half of 2017 stood at $554.4 million, up from $382.8 million a year ago, but the miner believes it will begin to fall early next year.

The company, which operates four diamond mines in South Africa and one in Tanzania, has said its current operational run rate supports a 2018 target of around 5 million carats, a goal to be reached a year earlier than originally projected.

Referring to Tanzania’s recent mining rules changes, Petra said its Williamson mine, in which it has a 75% stake, with the remaining 25% belonging to the country’s government, is now subject to an additional 1% royalty and a 1% export-clearing fee.

The diamond miner is also hoping to stop the South African government from increasing the minimum black ownership requirement for local mines to 30% from a previous 26%.

The stock recovered slightly on Tuesday and it was trading in London 0.56% up to 103.4p at 12:25PM local time.

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SpaceX abandonne l'idée de faire atterrir sa capsule Dragon avec des rétrofusées

SpaceX souhaitait faire atterrir les Dragon, ses capsules habitées, (sur Terre comme sur Mars) d'une façon similaire à celle utilisée pour récupérer l’étage principal de son lanceur Falcon 9, c'est-à-dire avec des rétrofusées. Mais il doit revoir ses plans.

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lundi 24 juillet 2017

Antofagasta, Barrick avoid Chile mine strike

Workers at the Zaldívar copper mine in Chile signed a wage deal with operator Antofagasta, the union and company confirmed  to Reuters on Monday:
There will be a government mediation period that will last at least five-days before workers are legally permitted to down tools

The workers voted to go on strike two weeks ago but had to enter a mandated government mediation period at the Antofagasta-Barrick Gold joint venture before being allowed to down tools.

A strike would've been the first in the history of Antofagasta. The London-listed company is part of the Luksic group of companies, one of Chile's largest conglomerates.

Zaldívar, an open-pit, heap-leach mine, produced 102,000 tonnes of copper in 2016. During the first quarter operator Antofagasta said production rose 7.3% to 26,600 tonnes at a cash cost of $1.75 per pound.

Canadian gold giant Barrick sold half of Zaldívar to Antofagasta for a shade over $1 billion in cash at the end of 2015. Proven and probable copper reserves at the mine located 150km east of Chile's capital Santiago is estimated at 2.36m tonnes (2016).

Antofagasta also faced labour action at its Centinela which last year produced 180,000 tonnes of copper. Antofagasta is the world's number 9 copper producer with total output of 477,000 tonnes last year on an attributable basis.

Chile is responsible for some 30% of global output. The world's largest copper mine Escondida was hit by a 43-day strike in February-March this year that crimped production by around 120,000 tonnes.

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UK Serious Fraud Office launches probe into Rio Tinto over Simandou

The UK’s anti-fraud investigating body said Monday it is probing Rio Tinto’s dealings in Guinea involving the giant Simandou iron ore project.

"The Serious Fraud Office has opened an investigation into suspected corruption in the conduct of business in the Republic of Guinea by the Rio Tinto group, its employees and others associated with it," the SFO said in a statement on Monday.

In November last year Melbourne-based Rio fired two executives involved in the project after an internal investigation uncovered a $10.5m payment in 2011 to a French national acting as a go-between with the West African nation’s government.

Simandou hasn't only dented Rio Tinto’s reputation

Rio, the world’s second largest mining company, announced in October it was fully exiting the project by selling its stake to former partner Chinalco for up to $1.3 billion. Rio has spent more than $3 billion advancing the project having first acquired the property in the late nineties.

Shares in Rio Tinto lost nearly 2% of its value in London on Monday amid a generally positive day for the mining sector, reducing its market valuation to $79 billion. Rio stock is up just over 5% year to date in line with a better trading environment for miners.

Simandou hasn't only dented Rio’s reputation.

Israeli billionaire Beny Steinmetz is fighting allegations of bribery when it acquired the rights to Simandou in 2008 when Guinea was under military rule.

BSGR, the mining arm of the diamond magnate, signed a multi-billion dollar deal with Brazil's Vale in 2010 to jointly develop the project, but Guinea stripped BSGR’s rights in 2014. Rio last year had its lawsuit for damages against BSGR and Vale dismissed in a New York court.

In June, ex-Wall Street banker Mahmoud Thiam who served as Guinea’s mining minister during 2009–2010 was convicted of laundering $8.5 million he was alleged to have taken to help a Chinese company gain mining concessions. Guinea is one of the world's largest producers of bauxite, the primary ore used in the production of aluminum.

With complete control of Simandou, Beijing-based Chinalco may revive the stalled project for the southern block of the 2 billion-tonne deposit of high-grade iron ore.

The original $20 billion agreement signed in 2014 with the backing of the World Bank (which has since withdrawn support) called for a new 650km railway to Conakry, Guinea's capital in the north, plus a new deep water port at a conservatively estimated cost of $7 billion, and infrastructure investments that would double the economy of the impoverished country.

 


NOW READ: The Iron Ore Wars 2002 – 2007

SLIDESHOW: The iron ore price wars 2002–2017

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Mosaic joins chorus calling BHP’s Jansen potash mine plan unwise

Mosaic (NYSE:MOS), the world’s largest producer of finished phosphate products, became the latest potash sector actor to cast a doubt on BHP’s recently announced plans to speed up the development of a giant potash mine in Canada.

The US miner said Monday that for BHP to spend another $4.7 billion, prices for the fertilizer ingredient would have to at least double from currents levels or the investment would simply not make any sense, The Australian reports.

“I think it is a less than high probability at this stage (but) you can never say what people will do,” Mosaic chief executive Joc O’Rourke said according to the paper.

BHP has committed so far a total of $3.8 billion for Jansen, but board needs to approve another $4.7 billion investment to move mine into production.

His view is in line with BHP’s activist investor Elliott, which last week attacked the company’s decision to grow its potash business to the size of its iron ore division, mainly by moving Jansen into production.

Sydney-based Deutsche Bank AG analyst Paul Young also questioned BHP’s bet on potash, telling Bloomberg earlier this month that Jansen was “highly contentious topic and project.” He noted the market has continued to be severely challenged, adding it may not improve for at least five years, as there is plenty of spare capacity in the industry.

While BHP board will decide whether to build the mine only next month, the world’s largest miner has been paving the way for it. So far, BHP has committed a total investment of $3.8 billion for the potash project. From that total, $2.6 billion have been set aside for ongoing surface construction and the sinking of shafts.

Chief executive Andrew Mackenzie said in May the company was looking at a phased expansion of Jansen, which is projected to produce 8 million tonnes of potash a year or nearly 15% of the world's total.

Mackenzie added the company could seek approval from the board for such expansion as early as June 2018, with production beginning in 2023.

BHP claims investing in potash is thinking ahead, and it has repeatedly stated it believes rising demand for fertilizer in growing nations, particularly China and India, will lead to a long-term price increase for the commodity.

“The basic rationale for rising potash consumption is quite simple,” wrote last week BHP’s potash specialist Paul Burnside. “Not only is the total population continuing to grow, but at least three billion people are expected to join the global middle class by 2030.”

Prices for the crop fertilizer ingredient, however, are not favourable — they are still hovering around $230 a tonne, less than half what they were only five years ago.

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Acacia Mining now hit with $190 billion tax bill in Tanzania

Things are going from bad to worse for Acacia Mining (LON:ACA), one of the largest gold producers in Africa, as the government of Tanzania sent the company a $190-billion bill in fines and allegedly unpaid taxes from two of its mines.

Together with disputing the astronomic bill, the company — Tanzania's No.1 gold producer — said it’s evaluating all of its options and rights, adding it will provide a further update in due course.

Shares collapsed once again on the news to close more than 25% lower in London at 184.5p. The stock has lost 66% of its value since March, when President John Magufuli’s ban on concentrates exports came into effect, affecting two of Acacia’s three mines or about a third of the firm’s output.

Acacia, which spun off from Barrick Gold in 2010, but it’s still majority-owned by the gold giant, first locked horns with the government of Tanzania last year, as it was accused of tax evasion in the ongoing case that triggered today’s multi-billion bill. The dispute escalated in March, when the concentrates ban officially began.

Less than four months later, Tanzania accused the company of operating illegally and said it had found evidence of the alleged tax evasion as a presidential team found the value of minerals within raw concentrate at the port of Dar es Salaam was 10 times higher than Acacia’s declared amount.

The escalating conflict pushed Barrick to intervene and Acacia to file arbitration notices for its Bulyanhulu and Buzwagi mines in order to protect its shareholders and the company, aiming to reach a settlement.

In mid-July, the miner agreed to pay higher taxes in the country and it’s now paying a 6% royalty, up from 4%, on metallic minerals including gold, copper and silver. The company, which spun off from Barrick Gold in 2010, also said it would continue to pay the recently imposed 1% clearing fee on exports.

The firm disclosed last week had been arrested and questioned, but denied early reports claiming that Tanzania had asked its foreign workers to leave the country.

World’s largest gold producer Barrick, which has a 64% stake in Acacia, is currently in talks with authorities in hopes of reaching a agreement over the claims against its subsidiary and the country’s current ban on mineral concentrate exports.

Its shares were also hit by today’s news, falling more than 2.3% by noon in Toronto to Cdn$19.82 and almost 2.7% in New York to $15.76 by 12:21 pm.

Acacia Mining, which owns and operates Tanzania’s three major mines, is also facing a lawsuit in the UK from relatives of miners who died at North Mara. Law firm Deighton Pierce Glynn is acting on 10 cases, most of which relate to incidents since 2013, and one as recently as last year.

According to Tanzania’s official data, 65 civilians have been killed by police at North Mara for trespassing since 2006 and another 270 have been injured.

 

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World's top diamond miner Alrosa output up 14% in first half of 2017

Russia's Alrosa (MCX:ALRS), the world's top diamond producer by output in carats, produced 14% more in the first half of this year than in the same period of 2016, thanks to higher grades achieved from several pipes.

The Aikhal division accounted for more than a third of the company’s total output in the period.

The miner, majority-owned by the Russian government, said Monday it produced 19.3-million carats of rough diamonds from the processing of 16.9-million tonnes of ore and sand.

The Aikhal division accounted for more than a third of the company’s total output in the period, having extracted 6.9-million carats of rough diamonds – a 26% year-on-year increase.

Alrosa noted that production from its iconic Mirny division jumped by 13% to 4.4 million carats. Output at Udachny increased by 29% to 2.1-million carats, while Nyurba yielded only 2% more to 3.4 million carats and the Lomonosov operation produced 28% more than the same period last year up to 1.2-million carats.

Most of those operations are based in Russia’s far eastern province of Yakutia, which also owns a stake in the company.

Alrosa, which expects to increase production by 6% to 39.2 million carats this year, recently appointed Sergei Ivanov, the son of a close advisor to Russian president Vladimir Putin, as its new president.

World's top diamond miner Alrosa output up 14% in first half of 2017

 

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Masse du proton : une particule plus légère que prévu

Au placard les balances de salle de bain ! Pour peser un proton, les physiciens doivent recourir à des expériences un peu plus élaborées, d'autant plus s’ils souhaitent le faire avec une grande précision. C’est ce que des chercheurs allemands sont parvenus à faire, avec un résultat...

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Luxembourg shoots for the stars with fresh space mining deal

Luxembourg seems to be in a rush to achieve its goal of becoming Europe’s hub for space mining, as it announced Monday a deal with a newly created company specializing in geolocation services and developing space infrastructure.

Kleos Space, 100% owned by UK-based Magna Parva, is one of dozens of firms to have either settled in the tiny country or signed cooperation agreements with the government since it launched its program to promote the mining of asteroids for minerals last year.

As part of the deal, Kleos Space will collaborate with EmTroniX, a Luxembourg-based electronics developer, and with the country’s Institute of Science and Technology (LIST), to speed up development of in-space manufacturing technology.

Deal comes only days after the nation became the first European country to pass a space mining law.

The ultimate objective, the government said according to German paper Tageblatt, is to make sure Luxembourg has its own space agency by the end of the year.

Today’s announcement comes only days after the nation, one of the euro zone's wealthiest, passed a law that defines the conditions companies must fulfill to obtain a licence for launching a space mining mission.

It also follows similar agreements with other well-known firms with asteroid mining plans, including US-based companies Deep Space Industries and Planetary Resources.

With Deep Space, Luxembourg is jointly developing Prospector-X, a small and experimental spacecraft that test technologies for prospecting and mining near Earth asteroids after 2020.

With Planetary Resources the link is mostly financial, as the country recently invested more than $28 million in the firm to help launch its first commercial asteroid prospecting mission by 2020.

While Luxembourg incursion in out of earth mining is fairly new, the country has a long-standing space industry, which has played a significant role in the development of satellite communications.

Geologists believe asteroids are packed with iron ore, nickel and precious metals at much higher concentrations than those found on Earth, making up a market valued in the trillions of dollars, and The Grand Duchy is definitely after them.

NOW READ: Luxembourg becomes first European country to pass space mining law.

Luxembourg shoots for the stars with fresh space mining deal

NASA’ OSIRIS-REx spacecraft will take samples of asteroid material and return it to Earth. (Image courtesy of NASA.)

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