mardi 31 octobre 2017

Settlement in $48 billion lawsuit against BHP, Vale postponed again

A Brazilian court granted BHP Billiton and Vale an extension to November 16 to negotiate a final settlement on $47 billion in claims stemming from a deadly dam burst at their Samarco joint venture in the country two years ago.

A settlement in the the civil lawsuit brought by Brazilian prosecutors against the two companies and Samarco for 155 billion reais (roughly $48 billion today) was originally scheduled for the end of June and later postponed to October 30.

In a separate deal in March last year Vale and BHP reached a deal with Brazilian authorities and the mine owners agreeing to pay an estimated 24 billion reais or $6.2 billion spread out over several years to compensate victims and rehabilitate the environment.

The disaster in Brazil’s Minas Gerais state that killed 19 people caused sludge to wash downstream into neighbouring state Espírito Santo through remote mountain valleys reaching the Atlantic ocean 600 kilometres away.

An analysts at London-based bank Investec told the Telegraph:

“A lot still to do in two weeks – call us cynical but we expect the date to be extended again.”

Samarco Mineracao ceased operations after the tailings dam failure and there is no timetable for it to re-open. At 30 million tonnes per year before the disaster Samarco's pelletizing operations supplied roughly one-fifth of the seaborne trade in the steelmaking raw material that attracts a premium price over iron ore fines and lump ore. Samarco has said that should the mine reopen output would likely be capped at 19 million tonnes per year.

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Liebherr to expand presence in America’s mining sector

It’s been a good year for Switzerland-based heavy equipment maker Liebherr, with orders picking up more than 21% in the first six months of the year, driven mostly by its mining and earthmoving divisions.

While sales in past years hovered around €4.3 to €4.4 billion ($5 to $5.1bn), from January to June this year the company has received more than €5.2bn ($6bn) in orders.

And the family-run company expects much more before year-end. According to Stefan Heissler, member of the board of directors of Liebherr-International, the group anticipates 2017 to be a record year in terms of both growth and sales.

Company to maximize presence in exhibitions, conferences and mine visits all over the continent.

Speaking to a group of media members at the end of October in Austria, Heissler said the company’s medium-term goal is becoming a preferred partner in the global mining industry. Key to achieve that objective, he noted, are the group’s start-up units — groups of dedicated experts who operate like an independent company to develop innovations.

One of those inventions is the T 236 mining truck, the company’s first 100 tonne class vehicle, which is currently being tested at Erzberg iron ore mine, in Austria.

While originally focused on the coal sector, the machinery maker has been diversifying into other sectors such as iron ore, copper, gold and Canada’s oil sands.

Jörg Lukowski, vice-president of sales and marketing, told MINING.com that in terms of geographic markets, Liebherr has a very strong presence in Europe, Australia and Africa, where the earth moving division has paved the way for the firm’s mining offer.

Liebherr to expand presence in America’s mining sector

The heavy equipment supplier has also been successful in Russia and in some countries in Asia (such as Mongolia) and South America. In those markets, however, Lukowski acknowledges there is quite a bit of room for improvement in terms of increasing the brand’s footprint in the mining sector.

Liebherr has vowed to continue to invest in its workforce, adding about 2,240 workers by the end of 2017, for a total of more than 44,550 employees worldwide.

The company said it would also carry on with investing in its international production facilities, and distribution and service network. By the end of 2017, it expects to have invested €733 million ($850m) this year.

In the past five years, the equipment maker has invested more than €4 billion ($4.7 billion) in the expansion of the group and while it did not provide figures, it did say the group now plans to focus its efforts and investment in conquering the North and South American mining markets.

EDITOR'S NOTE: MINING.com toured Erzberg's mine this month. Travel and accommodation was paid for by Liebherr.
Liebherr to expand presence in America’s mining sector

New PR 766 crawler tractor in operations at Erzberg mine, a large open-pit mine located in Eisenerz, Styria, in the central-western part of Austria. (Photo: MINING.com)

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Les éruptions solaires les plus puissantes depuis 12 ans en images

Contrastant avec le grand calme de ces derniers mois, l’activité de notre Soleil connut un violent sursaut en septembre 2017. Revivez ces évènements ponctués des éruptions solaires les plus intenses depuis 12 ans grâce aux images des plus grands satellites d’observation du Soleil. 

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Solid demand for large stones boosts Gem Diamonds sales

Sales from Africa-focused Gem Diamonds’ (LON:GEMD) iconic Letšeng mine increased sharply in the third quarter as improved demand for high-value rough precious rocks boosted prices, the company said Tuesday.

The Lesotho-based mine’s sales jumped by 19% year on year to $48.1 million in the three months to September 30, Gem Diamonds said. While sales volume dropped by 3% to 25,909 carats, average price rose 23% to $1,858.

The miner has found six diamonds larger than 100 carats atLetšeng in the first nine months of the year, compared with just four throughout 2016.

The miner recovered 30,774 carats during the quarter, up 23% from the 24,999 carats in the second quarter. It achieved an average price of almost $2,400 per carat for the July sales, making it the highest reached for a tender since September 2015.

Chief executive Clifford Elphick said that together with demand for high-quality diamonds remaining firm, the company’s benefitted from a group-wide efficiency and cost reduction review. So far, Gem Diamonds has identified annual and once off cost savings of $20 million, which is an increase of $5 million over the figure announced at the time of its interim results.

During the period, Gem Diamonds sold a 7.87-carat pink diamond for $202,222 per carat, the second-highest average price in the Lesotho mine’s history. A 55.58-carat, white diamond went for $61,778 per carat, the highest average price for a white diamond from the mine this year, the company said. Other sales in the quarter included a 126-carat stone, which fetched $56,402 per carat.

The company also saw an increase in availability of high-end stones, with the Letšeng mine yielding six 100-carat-plus diamonds in the first nine months of the year, compared with just four in the whole of 2016. Total production from the mine jumped 26% to 30,774 carats.

Since acquiring Letšeng in 2006, Gem Diamonds has found four of the 20 largest white gem quality diamonds ever recovered, which makes the mine the world’s highest dollar per carat kimberlite diamond operation.

At an average elevation of 3,100 metres (10,000 feet) above sea level, Letšeng is also one of the world’s highest diamond mines.

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More than 2,000 miners sacked at Sibanye’s Cooke gold mine

South African precious metals producer Sibanye-Stillwater (JSE:SGL) (NYSE:SBGL), has delivered termination letters to over 2,000 workers at its loss-making Cooke gold mine.

The National Union of Minworkers (NUM) said through its Twitter feed on Tuesday that the company has officially begun mothballing the operation. It added the miners being sacked will hold a mass meeting at the mine tomorrow morning.

More than 2,000 miners sacked at Sibanye’s Cooke gold mineThe miner, South Africa’s largest gold producer and the world’s third largest producer of palladium and platinum, had warned in August it would restructure its Beatrix West and Cooke operations, a move that was expected to affect 7,400 of its employees.

At the time, the company also said it might cut up to 330 jobs in the mines acquired from Anglo American Platinum and Aquarius Platinum.

Sibanye has since abandoned plans to close some of its platinum mines, as it achieved bigger than expected cost-savings, it said earlier this month.

More than 2,000 miners sacked at Sibanye’s Cooke gold mine

The miner, which conducted a $1 billion rights issue earlier this year, halted dividend in August for the first time since it was spun off from Gold Fields in 2013, after reporting losses for the first half of the year and rising debt levels.

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Dépression saisonnière : 5 astuces pour l'éviter

Lorsque les jours raccourcissent, la dépression saisonnière fait son retour. De la luminothérapie au sport en passant par la psychothérapie, des solutions existent pour que la grisaille de l'automne ne vienne pas ternir notre moral.

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More than 10 firms in the running for Codelco's lithium assets — chairman

More than ten international and domestic companies are keen to partner with Chile’s Codelco, the world’s biggest copper producer, to develop its massive lithium assets in the country’s north, the firm's chairman Oscar Landerretche said Tuesday.

Speaking to Reuters during LME Week, Landerretche didn’t disclose any names, but noted the company’s lithium possessions are two salt lakes in “very early stages” of exploration and development.

The state miner began seeking private-sector partners to develop and exploit its Maricunga and Pedernales deposits in January. Shortly after, it set up a subsidiary to spearhead the process. 

The state miner began seeking private-sector partners to develop and exploit its Maricunga and Pedernales deposits in January and, shortly after, it set up a subsidiary to spearhead the process. The move was part of a broader plan conceived by the National Lithium Commission to further develop the country’s lithium sector, which includes opening it to foreign companies.

Due to a law that dates back to the late 1970’s, the white-silver metal is considered “strategic” for Chile. As a result, lithium producers need to obtain a license from both the Chilean Nuclear Energy Commission (CCHEN by its Spanish initials) and the Mining Ministry.

The Ministry hasn’t awarded a permit in more than two decades, while CCHEN has only ever approved new quotas for two firms besides Codelco — US-based Albemarle Corp., and Soc. Química & Minera de Chile (SOQUIMICH).

The copper miner was recently granted the right — transferable to third parties — to produce 325,045 tonnes over 40 years, a figure that while not extremely big, could help reduce a looming lithium supply deficit.

According to Goldman Sachs Group, supply growth seems too slow, which is creating bottlenecks that pose "serious risks" to the future of mass adoption of electric vehicles, it said in a note early this month.

Codelco's lithium assets have more than 10 firms after them — chairmanOpening up Chile’s vast salt flats to production could reduce those risks. The country has half of the world’s most “economically extractable” reserves of the metal, according to the US Geographical Survey (USGS). It is also the world’s lowest-cost producer, thanks to an efficient process that makes the most of the country’s climate.

Codelco's lithium assets have more than 10 firms after them — chairman

In terms of output, Chile shares the post with Australia as one the world's largest producers of the metal, frequently referred to as "white petroleum,” which has become an irreplaceable component of rechargeable batteries used in high tech devices and electric cars.

Codelco's lithium assets have more than 10 firms after them — chairman

By: MINING.com.

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Intelligence artificielle : Shelley, une IA qui donne la chair de poule

Une équipe du Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) a créé une intelligence artificielle (IA) baptisée Shelley qui collabore avec les humains via Twitter pour inventer des histoires d'horreur. Les récits sont élaborés par séries de phrases écrites à tour de rôle par la machine et les...

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CO2 dans l'atmosphère : une concentration record

Avec 403 parties par million (ppm) de CO2 dans l'atmosphère en 2016, un record est battu, qui datait de plusieurs millions d'années. Pour réduire les conséquences, il serait judicieux de modérer nos émissions de gaz à effet de serre.

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Funérailles écologiques : les alternatives à l'inhumation et la crémation

Si, en France, seules l'inhumation et la crémation sont possibles en matière de funérailles, d'autres pratiques voient le jour dans le monde, mais restent plutôt marginales. Quelles sont ces alternatives jugées plus écologiques par leurs partisans ?

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Battle Dev : la compétition en ligne des développeurs est imminente !

Développeurs, n’hésitez pas à vous inscrire pour la prochaine Battle Dev organisée avec RegionJobs, dont Futura est partenaire. Elle aura lieu mardi 7 novembre. À la clé, 5.000 euros de cadeaux à gagner et, surtout, des rencontres avec des entreprises.

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Halloween : de monstrueux bruits venus de l'espace

Tenues effrayantes, décors inquiétants : pour Halloween, nous cherchons à nous faire peur. Afin de nous mettre dans l’ambiance, la Nasa a rassemblé, sous la forme d'une playlist, des « sons » venus de l’espace. Monstrueux…

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lundi 30 octobre 2017

Canada's 3rd largest mining IPO points to healthy investor appetite

On the eve of listing, Nexa Resources (TSX:NEXA, NYSE:NEXA), spun out of Brazil's Votorantim conglomerate, lowered the price of its initial public offering to $16 per share from the previously expected range of $18–$21 per share.

Nexa, a major zinc producer with five operating mines in South America, raised just shy of $500m on Friday making it the third largest mining IPO in Canadian history.

Any metals and mining IPO would be tough to do. There is a lot of scar tissue among dedicated metals and mining investors

The company may have left some money on the table for the 31 million shares offered – after a nice 10% pop on Friday, the counter was up again today adding 3.7% to trade at $18.05 a share for a market value of just over $2 billion in New York.

Reuters reported ahead of the listing that the IPO would be closely watched to gauge the health of the industry quoting an unnamed market participant as saying “any metals and mining IPO would be tough to do. There is a lot of scar tissue among dedicated metals and mining investors.”

Nexa, with mined zinc production of around 417,000 tonnes last year, is a top five refined zinc producer behind the likes of Swiss diversified giant Glencore, India's Vedanta and Canada's Teck Resources.  Zinc accounts for 64% of its production and together with its copper, lead, silver and gold output Nexa produced 651,000 tonnes of zinc equivalent last year.

Almost half of Nexa's production is from a single mine, Cerro Lindo in Peru and the company traces its history back to the start-up of its Atacocha mine in Peru in 1938.

The company said of the proceeds of the offer is destined for two large greenfield projects, Aripuana in Brazil and Shalipayco in Peru which together would add more than 94,000 tonnes to zinc production according to the company's prospectus.

Zinc traded at $3,197 a tonne ($1.45 a pound) in London on Monday, up 24.7% year to date. Last year the metal, mainly used to galvanize steel, averaged more than a $1,000 a tonne below today's ruling price.

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Une étrange bulle bleue dans le ciel de Sibérie

Dans la nuit du 26 octobre, en Sibérie, plusieurs personnes ont pu voir une sphère lumineuse bleutée grandir dans le ciel, à côté des aurores boréales qui dansaient à ce moment-là. S’agissait-il d’un phénomène naturel ou artificiel ?

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Calvitie : un traitement soupçonné de favoriser la dépression

Le finastéride, un médicament contre la chute des cheveux, provoque des effets secondaires chez les hommes qui en prennent. Certaines conséquences indésirables, comme des troubles sexuels, étaient déjà connues, mais l'Agence du médicament (ANSM) alerte en particulier sur les cas de «...

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La Nasa prolonge la mission Dawn autour de Cérès

La Nasa a autorisé une deuxième extension de la mission Dawn autour de Cérès, le plus grand objet de la ceinture d'astéroïdes, située entre Mars et Jupiter. Les explications de Pierre Vernazza, chargé de recherche au CNRS et chercheur au laboratoire d'Astrophysique de Marseille.

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Empreintes de dinosaures : la plus longue piste de sauropode est en France !

En 2009, la découverte d'empreintes d'un dinosaure gigantesque, à Plagne, dans le massif du Jura, avait été annoncée par le CNRS, donnant lieu à une importante couverture médiatique. Plusieurs campagnes de fouilles ont été menées, de 2010 à 2012, par le laboratoire de Géologie de Lyon, mettant...

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HISat, des satellites assemblés en orbite comme des Lego

Un nouveau type de satellites de petites tailles, de la société américaine NovaWurks, inaugure un principe nouveau : une conception modulaire. Assemblés à la manière de briques Lego, ces modules correspondent chacun à une tâche. Les astronautes de l'ISS ont joué à ce jeu pour réaliser le premier...

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L’AT200, le plus grand drone cargo du monde, a pris son envol

Conçu par une filiale de l’Académie chinoise des Sciences, le plus grand drone cargo du monde a effectué un vol inaugural. L'AT200 peut emporter une charge utile de 1.500 kg et dispose d’une autonomie de vol de 8 heures.

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dimanche 29 octobre 2017

Rick Perry suggests proposal to force utilities to pay more for non-renewables

U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry has come up with a controversial plan to slow the closure of coal-powered fire plants, under the guise of stabilizing the power grid.

The background of the yet-to-be-passed policy dates back to April, when Perry instructed his second-in-command to develop a 60-day review that looks at how regulatory burdens, subsidies, and tax policies “are responsible for forcing the premature retirement of baseload power plants.” He also wanted to know whether wholesale energy markets adequately compensate actions that, in his view, strengthen grid resilience such as on-site fuel supply usually provided by coal and nuclear plants.

The view of Perry and the current DoE is that America's power grid would become vulnerable if more coal-fired power plants – a form of reliable baseload power – were to close down. It cites the 2014 polar vortex in the Arctic, which sent most of the country into a a deep freeze and hiked electricity demand, as an example of a situation that put the power grid in jeopardy. To counteract such a threat, the energy department is suggesting that power plants with fuel on site would be a bulwark against such events.

The details of Perry's proposal to have electricity companies pay the costs for power plants that keep 90 days of fuel on site, is described in Scientific American:

Perry and the DoE issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (pdf), or NOPR, which, if enacted, would dramatically alter the power sector. The NOPR requests that the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC)—an independent agency that regulates electricity transmission—require utility companies to pay not just for the electricity they buy from power plant companies and supply to consumers, but also for the fixed costs associated with power plants that keep 90 days of fuel on site. That sort of “cost recovery,” as it is called, would be largely unprecedented.

The only power plants that keep fuel on site are coal and nuclear plants; non-renewable energy plants that produce electricity from wind and solar do not consume fuel. Natural gas plants get their fuel from pipelines not from stockpiles.

Could Perry's plan actually turn into policy? “We do not expect FERC [the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission] to reject this proposal outright,” Christine Tezak, managing director of research for ClearView Energy Partners, an energy research and analysis firm, told Scientific American. “We expect the FERC to take it seriously, if not literally.”

The article goes on to say that critics believe the electricity grid is strong enough to withstand outlier weather events, without subsidizing coal and nuclear power. The argument in favour of NOPR is that allowing coal-fired power plants to recover some of their expenses from utilities, which would likely get passed onto consumers in the form of higher rates,“would in theory restore something closer to the real value of those plants.”

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China imported record iron ore in September as steel output curbs start to bite

The amount of iron ore shipped to China surpassed 100 million tonnes for the first time in September.

According to Hellenic Shipping News, both Australia and South Africa exported record amounts – 65.1MT and 5.09MT – while Brazil shipped its third highest level at 21.7MT.

Australia is China's largest iron ore importer followed by Brazil and South Africa. The three combined for 91.98MT in September, close to 13MT higher than August, reads a table of Chinese customs data, below. In total Chinese imports of Fe were 102.8MT, which is a 16% increase from August. The last record of 98.3MT was set in December 2015, according to Dry Bulk Freight News.

Earlier this month Chinese iron ore futures jumped more than 5%, due to a rally in steel prices, as China's steel mills ramp up production in expectation of a major output cut. Chinese steel output in September rose 5.3% from the year before to 71.8m tonnes; not far off the record 73.2m tonnes produced in August.

But mills in northern Chinese cities including top steel-producing Tangshan have been ordered to slash production due to a government mandate to fight pollution caused by industrial plants. As much as 30 million tonnes could be reduced between October and March.

According to London-based consultants CRU, China is on track to cut 240m tonnes of annual capacity by 2020 from its peak in 2015,

The reality of the cuts (mills have begun reducing rates) are beginning to be reflected in the iron ore price. On Friday the spot price fell for the third straight session, in parallel with reductions in the price of Chinese futures. Via Business Insider Australia, Metal Bulletin reports the steelmaking ingredient (benchmark 62% fines) slid to a new two-week low of $60.08 a tonne Friday, extending its price decline from mid-August to 25%.

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Top paid positions at Canadian mines

This story was developed using data from Mining Intelligence. To learn more and schedule a demo, please click here

There are 10 occupations at Canadian mines that pay six-figures or more according to a recently compiled survey by Mining Intelligence conducted this year.

The top paid position is general manager that averages $212,790. The least paid is administrative assistant at $59,263.

In the chart below note that the range of pay varies as the salary level increases. Mean salary is to the right of the occupation title.

Looking at last year's survey results, Canadian geologists and mining engineers received a 1% to 4% salary increase, while similar positions in the US reported an average increase of 3.3%.

When comparing the salaries at US and Canadian mines, it appeared that Canadian metal mines were paying their employees as much as 13% more. However, with the current exchange rate factored in, the tables turn and the impact is with US employees earning 16% more than their Canadian counterparts.


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Les 10 plus gros fruits et légumes du monde

Un peu partout dans le monde, il est des jardiniers très prolifiques et bienheureux qui, chaque année, se retrouvent pour disputer les concours des plus gros fruits et légumes. Voici les derniers records homologués. Ils sont tous aussi impressionnants les uns que les autres.

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Un chat de Schrödinger à la fois mort et vivant dans deux boîtes

Le chat de Schrödinger censé être à la fois mort et vivant semble déjà paradoxal mais des expériences montrent qu’il peut aussi être présent dans deux endroits à la fois. Voilà de nouvelles perspectives pour les calculs quantiques.

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La majorité des comètes longues périodes seraient extrasolaires

Il y a sept ans, un groupe de chercheurs avait publié les résultats d’une simulation numérique intrigante. Selon elle, la majorité des comètes longues périodes issues du nuage d'Oort, comme Hale Bopp, ne se seraient pas formées dans le Système solaire. L'étude prend un nouveau relief avec la...

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samedi 28 octobre 2017

Top 5 des camions du futur

Les technologies de conduite autonome et la propulsion électrique ne sont pas réservées seulement aux voitures. En fait, elles sont même en train de préparer une révolution majeure dans le transport par camions dont nous devrions voir les résultats bien avant la voiture sans chauffeur.

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Nouveau dinosaure : le premier carnivore géant découvert en Afrique australe

Une piste d'empreintes de pas découverte en Afrique australe montre que des théropodes géants existaient il y a 200 millions d'années, bien avant les tyrannosaures du Crétacé. De quoi mieux comprendre l'histoire de cette lignée au gré des fractures de continents.

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Migraine : le sexe est bien un antidouleur deux fois sur trois

Si l’on savait que les endorphines libérées lors d’un orgasme pouvaient atténuer la douleur, peu d’études s’étaient penchées sur l’intérêt du sexe lors des maux de tête. Une recherche vient de montrer que dans 60 % des cas, faire l’amour durant une migraine diminuait significativement les...

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Psoriasis : un remède trouvé grâce à la fourmi de feu ?

Ce dimanche 29 octobre 2017 est la 14e journée mondiale du psoriasis. Cette maladie inflammatoire de la peau touche trois millions de personnes en France. Il n’existe pas pour l’instant de remède miracle pour en guérir, mais différents traitements locaux permettent d’atténuer les symptômes....

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vendredi 27 octobre 2017

The Polyus power play

With nearly nine out of every 10 of the world’s ounces as measured by production or reserves present, size mattered at the recent Denver Gold Forum.

Denver Gold Group, the organizers of the invitation-only event in Colorado Springs, brings together the global gold mining industry and the sector’s largest investors. The DGF has been held every year since 1989 and it’s worth remembering that gold was trading at $400 that year and was destined for a decade-long slump.

The Polyus power play

2016 Source: Company data, AMC CPR, Metals Focus

Despite the tumult in the industry in the intervening years the top tier of producers has stayed relatively stable. Thanks to a penchant for M&A the ranks of the world’s largest gold miners has only consolidated further in recent years.

Many gold producers are also beginning to talk about gold equivalent ounces to bulk up for the sake of investors. And after many quiet years mid-tier tie-ups are happening again and project acquisitions in exploration hot spots like the Yukon, Burkina Faso and Turkey are becoming more common.

The next few years will likely see the biggest shake-up at the top of the global gold pile in a decade.

In Russia with love

Polyus last month launched hot commissioning of its 10mtpa Natalka processing mill in Russia’s Far East. Once fully ramped up, Natalka is set to turn the country into the world’s number two gold producer behind China.

At full tilt the $2.3 billion Natalka mine will help lift Polyus production by a third to 2.8m ounces per year by 2019 and improve its ranking to around number five from the current 8th.

But the Moscow-based miner is not stopping there.

MINING.com sat down with Polyus chief executive Pavel Grachev at the DGF to find out what’s next for the company.

Polyus is not interested in embarking on an overseas spending spree and is not hung up about geographic diversity

Grachev is a lawyer by training and served three years as CEO of potash giant Uralkali before taking over the reins at Polyus in 2013. Grachev is unapologetic about the firm’s ambitions: “Polyus will be number three globally.”

As Russia’s number one producer Polyus is not interested in embarking on an overseas spending spree and is not hung up about geographic diversity says Grachev.

Grachev believes Polyus’s growth can be achieved organically and in its own backyard.

The Polyus power play for gold mining's top tier

Olimpiada produced 943koz last year. Image: Polyus Gold


Of course, a “very busy pipeline” and the industry’s second largest reserve base (71moz vs Barrick’s 77moz) makes that a much easier strategy to follow.

And an average mine life of 37 years – which Polyus claims is more than twice those of its peers – means the company’s half-a-dozen brownfield projects in the feasibility stage and seven brownfields either completed or in the final stages will only add to annual ounces, not make up for losses elsewhere.

Polyus was spun out of Russia’s top miner Norilsk Nickel in 2006.

Since then production has grown at annual rate of 6% to just shy of 2m ounces in 2016. That’s despite the fact that halfway through this period the company offloaded all its mines in Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Romania it acquired through its acquisition of Kazakhgold. During the first nine months of this year Polyus upped production another 13%.

Those growth rates were achieved by expanding its flagship Olimpiada mine which still accounts for a half of output and three mines exploiting the Blagodatnoye, Kuranakh and Verninskoye deposits. And as something of a throwback to the early days of the industry, Polyus alluvial operations still contributes 9% of total ounces.

Dry gully flowing with ounces

The Polyus power play for gold mining's top tier

Sukhoi Log's green fields hide 58m ounces of gold. Image: Gennady Vursiy Polyus Gold

But the real game changer was in February this year when Polyus won a government-backed auction to develop the legendary Sukhoi Log deposit, one of the largest undeveloped gold deposits globally and the biggest gold greenfield project in Russia.

Located in the Irkutsk region of Eastern Siberia, Sukhoi Log (which translates to "dry gully" in English) was discovered in 1961 and extensively explored by Soviet geologists since the 70s. In total over 320,000m of drilling have been carried out, including by a team from Canada's Placer Dome (now Barrick) in the late 1990s.

That would place Sukhoi Log near Muruntau in Uzbekistan, long the world’s most productive gold mine

A 2008 scoping study for Sukhoi Log estimated 930.3m tonnes of ore reserves, grading 2.1 g/t gold for 62.8m ounces of contained gold under the Russian Resource Estimation Standard or GKZ. Using JORC methodology Polyus calculated 887m tonnes of mineral resources at 2g/t for 58m ounces of contained metal in December 2016. Including Sukhoi Log, Polyus gold resources swell to a peerless 193m ounces.

Grachev says work on a $20-25 million per year feasibility study at Sukhoi Log would take another three to four years. SRK and Hatch have been contracted and the project, only 6km from the Verninskoye mine. Sukhoi Log is a well-known entity with nine engineering studies completed to date.

The Polyus power play

2016 Source: Company data, AMC CPR, Metals Focus

Camp construction has begun and drills are already turning on a 150,000m program, but Grachev sees no reason to fast-track development. The size of the operation is dependent on work done over the next few years, but there is no doubt that Sukhoi Log will be a massive mine.

According to Polyus’s London share offer prospectus Sukhoi Log would cost between $2 – $2.5 billion to construct and could produce roughly 1.6–1.7m ounces per year. That would place Sukhoi Log near Muruntau in Uzbekistan, long the world’s most productive gold mine.

Sukhoi Log would catapult Polyus into the top three of global producers and within shouting distance of the number one spot all things being equal. Which in gold mining they never are.

Free float

After an 18-month hiatus Polyus has successfully returned to the London Stock Exchange. The London investment community was less than thrilled when Polyus (and other Russian players) left for Moscow after fewer than five years, but Grachev says the company has spent a lot of “time and effort to build trust with the market” since then.

Prior to the London move, majority owner Said Kerimov agreed to sell a 9.4% stake to Chinese conglomerate Fosun International valuing the company at around $9 billion. If the Chinese government gives a green light to the deal, Fosun will buy a 9.4% stake and may exercise an option for another 5% at a (growing) discount to today’s ruling price.

In April last year the company introduced a new corporate governance structure and appointed three independent directors; most recently Maria Gordon, who previously ran a $10 billion emerging market fund for Goldman Sachs, was added to this list.

So why were investors willing to forgive and forget?
Following a successful $800m Eurobond placement, in June Polyus raised $879m in London selling 9% of the company, at roughly the same valuation as the Fosun deal and near the upper end of estimates. Its Global Depositary Receipts are up 20% since listing. Grachev says a top priority is to do more to increase the stock’s free float from the current 16% with a target of between 25%–30%.

So why were investors willing to forgive and forget?

Everyone loves a growth story and Polyus’s peers have been scaling back their ambitions since the boom years. Expected annual dividends of $500m+ don’t hurt either.

The limited impact on the ground for Russian miners of Western sanctions may have also convinced investors to get back in. Grachev says the only way Polyus has been affected are curbs on Russian banks which increased the cost of capital, but it’s not a significant hurdle staying below 5%.

All in

Polyus powers on

Free flowing ounces. Image: Polyus Gold

But in the end, it all boils down to one thing. Margins. Big fat ones.

Total cash costs for Polyus averaged $389 an ounce in 2016 and on all-in basis it was $572. That, not surprisingly, puts the company in the first decile of the global cost curve.

Don’t make the mistake of pinning the company’s low cost on the rouble says Grachev. In fact, the Russian currency had its best year ever in 2016 and has appreciated further this year.

All but one of Polyus’s mines are fly-in fly-out; all are large-scale open pit operations (and with grades associated more with underground mines), connected to grid power and grouped in clusters making reliance on third party infrastructure minimal.

It’s not just the underlying quality of the assets says Grachev: the company has a comprehensive cost reduction program across all units working on everything from recovery rates to information technology.

Moreover, Sukhoi Log would only improve cost measures for the company. Polyus expects costs of $430–$500 an ounce. Yes, that’s all in.

Grachev would not be drawn to predict the gold price. At those margins, he doesn’t have to.

 

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Imperial Metals announces $5 million private placement from billionaire backer

Vancouver-based copper miner Imperial Metals announced a $5 million financing today from N. Murray Edwards.

Murray, a Canadian oil sands financier and a co-owner of the Calgary Flames, is already a controlling shareholder. According to Bloomberg, Murray already has an equity stake of 35% in the company.

Earlier this month, Imperial Metals said it would not meet its 2017 meet metal production targets due to forest fires. Operations at the company's Mount Polley mine were temporarily suspended in July. Mill throughput for the third quarter was 1.44 million tonnes, down 23% from the second quarter.

Imperial is a Vancouver-based exploration, mine development and operating company that owns the Red Chris, Mount Polley and Huckleberry copper mines in British Columbia. Imperial also holds a 50% interest in the Ruddock Creek, a lead-zinc property in British Columbia.

Creative Commons image of forest fire from U.S. Department of Agriculture

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Malartic gold mine class-action lawsuit trial begins

A class-action lawsuit brought forward by residents allegedly affected by the Malartic gold mine, owned and operated in a 50:50 joint venture by Agnico Eagle Mines (TSX, NYSE:AEM) and Yamana Gold (TSX:YRI) (NYSE:AUY), is going before the Quebec Superior Court today.

The residents living close to the large open pit mine, located 25 km west of Val d’Or in Quebec’s Abitibi region, want to be compensated for damages related to dust, noise and explosions they claim to have been exposed to for many years.

The suit, filed last year, was approved by the same court in May. The decision came on the heels of the Quebec government allowing the Malartic gold mine expansion, a project that will increase its life span by six years, until 2028.

At the time, the provincial government said the two companies involved in the Malartic mine worked with the local community to ensure the project was “well understood” and “in line with the strategic vision for mineral development.” It did, however, included nine new conditions, five of which related to climate management.

About 1,200 people living close to the large open pit mine in Quebec’s Abitibi region, want to be compensated for damages related to dust, noise and explosions they claim to have been exposed to for many years.

Ugo Lapointe, Program Coordinator for MiningWatch Canada, said an independent expert panel that reviewed the project last year recommended a “mediation process” to resolve the conflict.

It also suggested, he said, that the companies review their compensation and relocation protocol to specifically address the community members’ concerns, including the need to be able to relocate in a neighbouring community without incurring debts, costs, or losses in the process.

"Currently, the companies’ lawyers are doing everything they can to prolong and delay process instead of moving ahead swiftly," Lapointe told MINING.com.

Reports show a $40,000 to $70,000 price difference between houses located close to the mine site and similar properties in neighbouring communities.

But the Quebec Superior Court excluded the possibility of landowners claiming real-estate losses in the class-action suit. Those claims must be done on an individual basis, the judge ruled.

A report published last year by Quebec’s environmental regulation agency (BAPE) concluded that the province’s environmental laws are inadequate to regulate the operation of an open pit mine such as that of Canadian Malartic. Likewise, the BAPE believes that government did not use “the coercive means” at its disposal to enforce current regulations.

According to that document, since 2011, the companies operating Malartic have been unable to demonstrate the mine can be run in an urban environment in accordance with the legal requirements imposed on it.

The report found the mine frequently exceeded the standards and criteria for noise, dust and vibrations, which resulted in recurring notices of noncompliance issued.

The class action covers an area that includes about 350 homes and apartment buildings (about 1,200 people), all located within 800 metres of the pit. The closest homes are 100 metres away from the operation, which runs round the clock, 365 days a year.

The Malartic mine has been operating since 2011. Agnico Eagle Mines and Yamana Gold Inc. acquired it in 2014, in a $3.9-billion takeover of Osisko Mining Corp.

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Astronautique : les étonnantes coulisses de la gestion des données spatiales

L’exploitation des satellites d’observation de la Terre, marché en pleine croissance, génère des quantités de données phénoménales et qui doivent être mises à la disposition d'une clientèle très variée. Comment archiver et gérer ce flot grandissant ? Nous avons posé la question à Michel...

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Biodiversité : la moitié des vertébrés menacés d'extinction vivent sur des îles

Parmi les espèces les plus menacées, la plupart vivent sur des îles. Bien qu'elles ne représentent que 5,3 % des terres émergées, elles ont abrité 61 % des espèces disparu en 500 ans depuis l’arrivée de l’Homme... et des animaux qui l'accompagnent toujours. D'où la possibilité d'améliorer les...

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This truck will help Liebherr become a big name in mining

Heavy equipment maker Liebherr’s goal of becoming one of the top suppliers for the mining industry seems to be a step closer as the Switzerland-based company has recently began the first field operation trial for its latest mining vehicle — the T 236 diesel electric truck.

The new rigid-frame dump truck with a diesel electric drive system, unveiled last year at MINExpo, is Liebherr’s entry into the 100 tonne class and its currently being tested at the Erzberg iron ore mine in Austria.

Designing and building all of the trucks components to perform and last in the most extreme mining conditions, makes Liebherr’s vehicles run much longer between component overhauls, saving time and money.

“Not only does it represent a new direction and increased expansion of Liebherr’s mining product range,” says Burkhard Richthammer, managing director, design and engineering Liebherr-Mining Equipment Colmar. “But the truck was closely developed via direct consultation with customers, industry experts, operators and end users to meet the current market requirements.”

Erzberg mine was carefully and deliberately chosen as the proving ground for the T 236, because it offers a varied and challenging set of conditions for field trials.

The alpine operation is active 24 hours for more than 330 days each year and the climate conditions can vary from snow with temperatures of -20°Celsius to summer heat, with in-pit temperatures that can reach 40°Celsius.

What’s even more challenging about this mine is that, in a matter of hours, the weather intermittently switches between rain, sunshine and howling winds, as MINING.com was able to experience during a product demonstration this week.

In addition, Erzberg offers both uphill and downhill haulage cycles, with a constant variation of grade, and has an existing fleet of trucks in the 100 tonne class, for the T 236 to work alongside as direct comparison.

Richthammer says that, by designing and building all of the company’s trucks to perform and last in the most extreme mining conditions, Liebherr’s vehicles run much longer between component overhauls, saving time and money.

In the coming year, Liebherr will supply further pre-series machines to selected operations to further validate the truck’s capabilities in South Africa and other selected global locations.

The plan is to have it commercially available by the end of 2018.

This truck will help Liebherr become a big name in mining

Erzberg mine was carefully and deliberately chosen as the proving ground for the T 236 because it offers a varied and challenging set of conditions. It’s active 24 hours for more than 330 days each year and the climate can vary from snow with temperatures of -20°Celsius to summer heat, with in-pit temperatures that can reach 40°Celsius. (Image: MINING.com.)

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Cameco posts unexpected third-quarter loss, trims production outlook

Canada’s top uranium producer Cameco (TSX:CCO) (NYSE:CCJ) logged Friday a surprise quarterly loss and cut its full-year production outlook, due mostly to weak prices for the radioactive metal and issues at two of its operations.

The Saskatoon, Saskatchewan-based miner said it now expects to produce 24.0 million pounds this year, down from an earlier forecast for 25.2 million pounds. It partly attributed the downward review to delays at its Key Lake mine and lower-than-expected production at its Smith Ranch-Highland operation.

Weak uranium prices continue to weigh on Cameco’s and the whole industry. They have fallen more than 50% since the Fukushima disaster in 2011 and have since remained low, mainly due to oversupply and excess inventory in the industry.

Cameco is also trimming capital spending guidance to $160 million for the year, compared with earlier expectations for $175 million.

“There has been little change to the market and we continue to face difficult conditions, with the average year-to-date uranium spot price down about 20% compared to the 2016 annual average,” Cameco president and CEO Tim Gitzel confirmed in the statement.

Gitzel noted the company has taken actions taken to address the situation, especially on the way global marketing activities are organized. As a result, Cameco incurred $5 million in one-time costs, but said it expected to save between $8 million and $10 million per year once fully implemented.

The company is also trimming capital spending guidance to $160 million for the year, compared with earlier expectations for $175 million.

The revised outlook came as Cameco says it lost $124 million or 31 cents per share in the three months to Sept. 30, compared with a profit of $142 million or 36 cents per share a year ago.

On an adjusted basis, the uranium miner said it lost $50 million or 13 cents per share its latest quarter, compared with a profit of $118 million or 30 cents per share in the same period last year. Revenue fell to $486 million compared with $670 million.

“We can’t control the timing of a market recovery, so we continue to focus on our tier-one strategy; on being as streamlined and efficient as possible; responsibly managing our production, inventory and purchases; protecting and extending the value of our contract portfolio, and maximizing cash flow while maintaining our investment-grade rating,” Gitzel said.

Cameco’s most immediate goal, he added, is to remain competitive and in a position to be among the first to respond when the market calls for more uranium.

The company’s US-listed shares fell by 5.7% at $8.34 in premarket trading. Year-to-date, they are down more than 20%.

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Bloodhound SSC : la voiture supersonique a pris la piste

La voiture supersonique Bloodhound SSC a effectué ses premiers essais sur piste et en public avec une pointe à « seulement » 337 km/h. Son objectif final est de battre le record de vitesse en ligne droite en atteignant 1.609 km/h.

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Découverte d’un étrange astéroïde qui pourrait venir d’une autre étoile

Les premières observations d’un petit corps céleste qui vient d’être découvert suggèrent qu’il vient de l’espace interstellaire. Si cela se confirme, ce serait le premier cas connu d’une comète ou d’un astéroïde venu d’ailleurs. Mais d’où ?

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Cosmétiques : 140 produits retirés de la vente à cause de substances interdites

Après les révélations de l'association d'UFC-Que choisir, que nous rapportions au début de l'année, les autorités ont effectué des contrôles. Résultat : 140 références ont dû être retirées de la vente. Elles contenaient en effet des allergènes interdits. Les fabricants mettent parfois un certain...

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Nouveau dinosaure : le premier carnivore géant découvert en Afrique du Sud

Une piste d'empreintes de pas découverte en Afrique du Sud montre que des théropodes géants existaient il y a 200 millions d'années, bien avant les tyrannosaures du Crétacé. De quoi mieux comprendre l'histoire de cette lignée au gré des fractures de continents.

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jeudi 26 octobre 2017

Tesla battu par Daimler : le premier poids lourd électrique s'appelle E-Fuso Vision One

Présenté au salon de Tokyo, le camion E-Fuso Vision One, de Daimler, est le premier poids lourd électrique. Il offre une autonomie de 350 km et peut emporter onze tonnes de charge utile, soit seulement deux de moins que son équivalent à moteur Diesel.

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China’s demand drives long-term gains for aluminium

In its latest report, BMI Research raised the 2018 aluminium price forecast to $2,000/tonne, from a previous forecast of $1,900/tonne.

Increasing demand, particularly from China, explains the shift as it “leads to a deeper-than-previously forecasted market deficit,” says the firm.

In the document, BMI goes on to explain that next year’s higher prices are the natural development of 2017’s reaction to strong Chinese economic data. The Asian giant’s financial performance pushed up base metals in August and allowed aluminium to break the $2,000/tonne barrier for the first time in three years.

“We previously identified this level as indicative of aluminium moving into a structurally higher trading range. Specific to the aluminium market, Chinese authorities will target significant capacity cuts over November 2017 – March 2018 as part of efforts to improve air quality. As of late October, we see this development as largely priced into aluminium prices. However, stricter enforcement of the cuts than we expect, namely targeting of active rather than just idled capacity that is not offset by new smelters coming online, could lead to a material decline in Chinese aluminium production and further deepen the global deficit, thus posing an upside risk to prices in 2018,” the report states.

BMI further support its forecast by looking at high-frequency indicators. According to their analysis, the monthly global primary aluminium balance has registered a persistent deficit since December 2016, with consumption exceeding production by 153kt in August 2017. This trend, the company says, it’s only going to intensify in the coming months. “Accordingly, we now forecast the market to shift into a deficit in 2017 rather than in 2018, and forecast a steeper deficit of 295kt in 2018 compared to a previous forecast of 167kt.

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Sirius Minerals lands major Asian deal

Sirius Minerals PLC (LON:SXX) shares advanced around 5% on Thursday as the company sealed a 7-year commercial deal with Wilmar Group, a Singapore listed agribusiness firm, which will have exclusive rights for the use and resale of POLY4 in Indonesia, Malaysia, Vietnam, Thailand, Philippines and Myanmar.

POLY4 is the fertiliser product that will be made at Sirius’ Woodsmith Mine in North Yorkshire, United Kingdom. According to the company, the site hosts the “world's largest and highest grade polyhalite deposit” and it is set to generate an initial 10 million tonnes per year of this type of potash before it enters a second phase that will double that production to 20 million tonnes a year.

Within the deal with Wilmar up to 750,000 tonnes of the POLY4 would be shipped to Southeast Asian customers. The Singaporean company has the option to lift the offtake volume up to 1 million tonnes per annum. The pricing parameters will be linked to prevailing market prices for certain nutrients contained within POLY4, such as potassium, sulphur, magnesium and calcium.

“We are delighted to be partnering with one of the largest and most established fertilizer buyers and distributors in South East Asia, (…) a fast-growing market which provides Sirius with an attractive opportunity to further diversify and grow our current portfolio of customers,” Sirius managing director and CEO, Chris Fraser, said in a press release.

Yet, this is not Sirius’ first big contract. The London-listed company already had offtake deals with partners in Europe, South America, China and Southeast Asia. Together, those deals amounted to 3.6 million tonnes of fertilizer, according to a report by Proactive Investors.

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Helicopter operated by Russian coal company crashed in Arctic Norway

A Mi-8 helicopter operated by Russian coal company Arktikugol crashed on Thursday with eight people on board into the sea off Svalbard.

According to the rescue service for northern Norway, the helicopter was en route from the Russian settlement of Pyramiden to Barentsburg, where Arktikugol runs a coal mine and which is Svalbard’s second-largest settlement with about 500 residents.

Under a 1920 treaty, Oslo has sovereignty over this Arctic archipelago, which is 500 miles north of Norway’s mainland, yet other +40 signatory countries have rights to exploit its natural resources.

According to the Russian Energy Ministry, there were three passengers on board who were working for the country’s Arctic and Antarctic Research Institute. The other five people, also Russians, were part of the crew.

By publication time, Norwegian rescuers were conducting a search for survivors. They think they have located the sunken wreckage of the aircraft because they have seen oil spills and air bubbles, as well as what seems to be a submerged object. However, poor visibility and heavy snowfall in the region are slowing down their efforts.

According to The Straits Times, a remotely operated mini submarine was being flown to the site and would likely be deployed in the early hours of Friday to help verify whether a discovery had been made.

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Savannah Resources enters the lithium race in Europe

In response to European automakers’ push for lithium-ion battery packs, Savannah Resources (AIM:SAV) announced its plans to start mining lithium at its Mina do Barroso in northern Portugal by the end of 2019.

Currently, an ongoing Reverse Circulation drill programme is taking place at the site and will help define a Mineral Resource Estimate as a basis for a scoping study.

Mina do Barroso is arguably one of the most advanced lithium mining concessions in Europe and, according to company officials, it would be the continent's first significant producer of spodumene, a hard-rock form of lithium.

“We’re in a unique position in Europe. What we have is a premier lithium project (…). Late 2019 for a production start is an aggressive target for Savannah but also one which the company thinks is achievable,” CEO David Archer told Reuters.

At present, Europe relies on lithium imports from Latin America’s ‘Lithium Triangle,’ as well from Australia and China.

When it comes to battery-making, Asia is the place to go although South Korea’s LG Chem is scheduled to open a giant lithium-ion battery factory in Poland in 2018.

According to Archer, Savannah does not yet have offtake deals, but is looking to negotiate with the companies that convert spodumene concentrate into battery chemicals, as well as with automakers.

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Why did this slide wipe $1.3B from Teck's market value?

Vancouver-based Teck Resources, Canada's largest diversified miner which is close to completing a major oil sands project, reported on Thursday a nearly four-fold increase in quarterly profits.

The metallurgical coal business of Teck, also a major copper and zinc producer, accounted for 72% of its gross profits during the first nine months of the year.

Operationally Teck's coal business has  been humming. The company said its coking coal unit moved a record of 79 million bank cubic meters (BCM’s) during the quarter.

Third quarter steelmaking coal sales reached 7.54 million tonnes, the company's second highest quarterly sales on record. Teck expects its steelmaking coal sales to be roughly 6.5 million tonnes this quarter and total production for 2017 at the lower end of 27–27.5 million tonnes.

The company said average realized steelmaking coal prices for the first nine months of the year came in nearly $100 above last year's price at $178 per tonne. With forecast unit cost of sales in the range of $49 to $53 per tonne for 2017, met coal should continue to be a cash cow for Teck. A major water management capex project in the Elk Valley would add $6 a tonne – from 2023 onwards.

There is also a chance that premium quality coal could in fact make up a great percentage of the mix following the closure of its Coal Mountain mine in British Columbia

So what set off investors who in more than three times the usual volumes marked the share down 9% on Thursday, wiping some $1.3 billion of its value in New York?

Teck said it expects a larger proportion of its coal sales in the fourth quarter to be non-premium coal, due to "a shortfall in planned raw coal inventory" which will reduce its average realized price relative to the benchmark to roughly 85% during the fourth quarter. That compares to an average of 94% from 2014 to 2016.

Teck stresses that it would be a "one-time only" shift and it will "transition to a more traditional product mix going into 2018." There is also a chance that premium quality coal could in fact make up a great percentage of the mix following the closure of its Coal Mountain mine in British Columbia next year.

The company also said that the rolling average for the current quarterly price index is $194 a tonne (which translates to a still respectable $165 a tonne when accounting for Teck's coal mix in Q4). The spot price for FOB Newcastle premium coking coal was $177.90 a tonne on Thursday.  Teck says about 40% of its sales are negotiated on a quarterly contract basis and the rest are linked to the spot market.

At $12 billion following today's fall, Teck shares are only worth 4% more in New York than at the start of the year so perhaps investors are taking a too harsh view of the black stuff.

And its worth remembering that the average zinc price is 42% higher year to date and the company lifted its zinc production outlook for the year by 50,000 tonnes today. Copper prices are up 26% and the company lowered its cost guidance to $1.30–$1.40 a pound.

Teck also received approval for a share buyback program earlier this month and the Canadian dollar has been sliding and is projected to fall to $0.75 against the USD next year after peaking at $0.82 last month.

Shares in Teck was already moving higher in after hours trading in New York on Thursday. Perhaps today's ugly session would be quickly forgotten.

Why did this slide wipe $1.3B from Teck's market value?

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Barrick shares crater as Tanzania troubles grow

Shares in Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:ABX)(TSX:ABX) fell on Thursday over investor concerns that the Canadian company's Tanzanian unit dispute with the East African country is far from settled.

Barrick stock trading in New York fell as much as 7.6% by early afternoon, slicing more than a billion off its market value. For the week the Toronto-based gold miner, the world's largest in terms of output, is down more than 12% and is now worth $17.1 billion on the NYSE.

In its third quarter results released yesterday Barrick reported adjustments of $172 million in a tax provision relating to a framework agreement between its 64%-owned Acacia Mining subsidiary and the government of Tanzania.
“It would be premature of anybody to sit and say that is a final position. Which is why we refer to it as a down payment: there’s more work to be done yet.”
Last week Barrick announced that Acacia would pay Tanzania $300 million and hand the government a 16% stake in three of its gold mines, to end the dispute.

The gold producer has faced government pressure since March when the country imposed a ban on gold concentrate, which represents about a third of Acacia’s output. In July, Tanzanian President John Magufuli served Acacia with a $190 billion (yes, billion) tax bill.

But in a conference call on Thursday Barrick's Chief Operating Officer Richard Williams told investors that the $300 million "number was, again, come to on the basis of probability both parties agreed that could be the region of a settlement":

“It would be premature of anybody to sit and say that is a final position. Which is why we refer to it as a down payment: there’s more work to be done yet.”

Barrick also cut its full-year gold production guidance and the company now expects to produce 5.3–5.5m ounces in 2017 compared to a target of 5.6–5.9m ounces at the start of the year.

We now believe that the focus will shift to the weaker operational results, value loss at Acacia and ABX's relative production profile vs. peers over the next three years

Barrick came in for some criticism from Credit Suisse's Anita Soni who wrote in a report quoted by Barron's "that the momentum behind Barrick's turnaround story is slowing":

We now believe that the focus will shift to the weaker operational results in 2017 YTD (Veladero spill, Turquoise Ridge ore issues and lower PV throughput due to sulfur in ore in Q3), value loss at Acacia and ABX's relative production profile vs. peers over the next three years. As a result we are reducing our target NAV multiple to 1.70x from 2.00x (peer average is 1.85x).

There were mixed fortunes for other gold miners releasing results this week.

Shares in world number two producer Newmont Mining (NYSE:NEM) also came in for punishment losing nearly 4% in New York in midday trade Thursday after announcing rising costs and disappointing selling prices for gold during its third quarter. The Denver, Colorado-based miner has overtaken Barrick as the world's most valuable gold miner with a market worth of $19 billion. Newmont maintained its 5.0–5.4m ounces output forecast for 2017.

Goldcorp surged 5.9% out of the gate on Thursday after the Vancouver-based company announced a 88% jump in net earnings for the quarter despite a fall in production. The world's number four gold miner in terms of output kept its outlook for the year the same at roughly 2.5 million ounces. The company also announced a 26% jump in gold mineral reserves to 53.5m ounces, primarily due to the conversion of 4.7m ounces into reserves at its Century project at its Porcupine mine in Ontario Canada following a positive pre-feasibility study.

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Vale is stockpiling iron ore to make the most of higher prices

On Thursday, the iron ore price continued to drift lower, but held above the psychologically important $60 a tonne level after top producer Vale said
it will ramp up output sharply over the next two years.

The Steel Index benchmark price for Northern China 62% Fe ore lost 0.8% to trade at $60.60 a tonne. Iron ore has pulled back nearly 24% from its 2017 opening levels, but year-to-date the price is averaging $71.60 a tonne compared to $56.50 over the course of 2016.

Rio de Janeiro-based Vale on Thursday announced a nearly four-fold increase in net income to $2.23 billion during the third quarter thanks to the higher iron ore price.

2019 production guidance includes an additional 10m tonnes of pellets

It was below consensus estimates however and Amos Fletcher, a Barclays analyst, told Reuters the miss may have been due to lower shipping volumes as Vale "held back iron ore inventories in expectation of higher prices ahead."

Vale sold 76.4m tonnes of iron ore during the third quarter, 2.2m tonnes more than the same period last year. That compares with production during the quarter of a record 95.1 million tonnes as its massive S11D mine in the Amazon continues to ramp up.

For 2017 the Brazilian miner expects to produce 360–380m tonnes, but in comments with the release of the financial results Vale said ore production will grow to 390m tonnes next year and 400m tonnes in 2019. The 2019 guidance includes an additional 10m tonnes of pellets.

Vale executives believe iron ore will trade above $65 per tonne in 2018.

World number four iron ore producer, Australia's Fortescue Metals Group, also released quarterly results on Thursday announcing shipments rose slightly to 44m tonnes during the quarter. Kumba Iron Ore, this week also increased full-year production targets by 1m tonnes to between 42–44m tonnes, the result of a positive performance its Sishen mine in the Northern Cape province of South Africa.

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Une note d’Einstein sur le bonheur vendue 1,56 million de dollars

Quelques mots en allemand sur un morceau de papier jauni. Pas de quoi en faire une histoire. Sauf si ces mots-là ont été écrits par le plus célèbre des physiciens : Albert Einstein en personne.

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Halloween : 7 bonnes raisons de manger des citrouilles

La citrouille Cucurba pipa fait partie de la famille des courges. Utilisée comme décoration pour la fête d’Halloween, elle sert aussi d’ingrédient pour de délicieux gratins et tartes. Riche en bêta-carotènes et en fibres, elle apporte de nombreux bénéfices pour la santé. Voici sept raisons...

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Avec Amazon Key, le livreur déposera le colis dans votre maison

Amazon lance un nouveau service qui va permettre à un livreur d'entrer chez le client en son absence pour y déposer le colis. La livraison est contrôlée à distance via une serrure connectée et une webcam. Il faudra débourser 250 dollars (environ 211 euros) pour acheter le kit.

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Eldorado cuts production guidance at Turkey mine

Eldorado Gold Corp. (TSX:ELD)(NYSE:EGO) announced today that it was cutting its guidance for gold production at Kisladag, its flagship gold mine in Turkey.

According to a press release, gold recovery from the leach pad at the operation has lagged internal expectations. Thus, the company believes that production this year would be 170,000 to 180,000 ounces at cash costs of $500 to $550 per ounce.

Eldorado also placed its guidance for 2018 and beyond under review. The revised guidance was down from an estimate of 180,000 to 210,000 ounces in June and the company's original 2017 guidance for 230,000 to 245,000 ounces.

Following the news, the company's shares fell more than 10 per cent. In late-morning trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange, the stock was down 49 cents or about 18 per cent at $2.24.

Despite the not so positive outlook, the Canadian miner ended the quarter with a cash and cash equivalent $752.113 million or roughly $0.77 per share.

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Mars : on a trouvé comment y produire de l'oxygène

Pour les missions humaines sur Mars, envisagées dans le courant de la décennie 2030, l'approvisionnement en oxygène a toujours été imaginé comme venant d'une extraction à partir de l'environnement martien. Mais l'idée reste théorique. Une équipe des universités de Lisbonne et de Porto, ainsi que...

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Villes du futur : Neom, la mégapole high-tech voulue par l'Arabie saoudite

Le prince héritier de l'Arabie saoudite Mohammed ben Salmane Al Saoud a annoncé la construction d'une ville futuriste au nord-ouest du pays, sur les bords de la mer Rouge. Baptisée Neom, cette mégapole promet d'embrasser les dernières technologies en matière d'énergies renouvelables,...

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Exoplanète : Trappist 1 chaufferait des océans de magma par induction

Trois des exoplanètes en orbite autour de Trappist 1, dont une potentiellement habitable, seraient chauffées par induction par le champ magnétique de la naine rouge. Le phénomène engendrerait un volcanisme important et même des océans de magma internes. De quoi se poser des questions sur...

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mercredi 25 octobre 2017

Canadian project lifts Goldcorp reserves 26%

Shares in Goldcorp Inc (NYSE:GG)(TSX:G) turned higher Wednesday after the company reported third quarter results that showed huge jump in profitability despite a sharp decline in gold production.

Vancouver-based Goldcorp more than erased its losses during regular trading after hours for a market capitalization of $11.2 billion in New York after reporting a 88% jump in net earnings to $111m or $0.13 per share, above expectations.

Revenues declined by 5.4% compared to a year ago, but also beat Wall Street forecasts at $866m.

Goldcorp's gold output declined from 715koz during Q3 2016 to 633koz in the same period this year, but the world's number four gold miner in terms of output kept its outlook for the year the same at roughly 2.5 million ounces.

All-in sustaining capital costs for the third quarter came in at $827 per ounce, compared to $812 per ounce in the same quarter 2016. AISC of approximately $825 per ounce is forecast for the whole of 2017, down from an earlier forecast of $850.

The company also announced a 26% increase in mineral reserves to 53.5m ounces, primarily due to the conversion of 4.7m ounces into reserves at its Century project at its Porcupine mine in Ontario Canada following a positive pre-feasibility study and the acquisition of a net 8.4 million ounces of reserves.

Goldcorp said exploration drilling at Century and an "upcoming optimization study could continue to add value to this organic project with low execution risk in a proven mining district." The company said it remains on track to achieve a targeted 60 million ounces of gold reserves by 2021.

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Barrick cuts 2017 production guidance again

Shares in Barrick Gold Corporation (NYSE:ABX)(TSX:ABX) retreated in after hours trade on Wednesday after the company reported a small loss in its third quarter, and lowered its production guidance and upped its expected costs for the full year.

Barrick is now down 5.5% over the past week as investors weigh the impact of troubles at its Tanzanian unit. The Toronto-based company is now worth $18.4 billion in New York.

Barricks' full-year gold production is now expected to be 5.3–5.5m ounces compared to 5.6–5.9m ounces at the start of the year

Barrick reported adjustments of $172 million in a tax provision relating to a framework agreement between its majority-owned Acacia Mining unit and the government of Tanzania.

Last week Barrick announced that Acacia would pay Tanzania $300 million and hand the government a 16% stake in three of its gold mines, to end the dispute. The gold producer has faced government pressure in Tanzania since March, when President John Magufuli imposed a ban on gold concentrate, which represents about a third of Acacia’s output.

Revenues during the third quarter declined to just under $2 billion, down 13.5% year on year. Barrick produced 1.24 million ounces of gold in the quarter to end-September at an all-in cost of $772 per ounce, up from $704 during the same period last year.

For the year Barrick upped the lower-end of its cost guidance and at the same time trimmed expected total production in 2017.

Barrick, the world's largest gold miner in terms of output, now expects full year production of 5.3–5.5 million ounces, a second downward adjustment down from its outlook at the start of the year of a range of 5.6–5.9 million ounces.

All-in sustaining costs of between $740-$770 per ounce is predicted for the year. Higher all-in sustaining costs primarily reflect a planned increase in minesite sustaining capital expenditures at Barrick Nevada and Veladero according to the company.

Barrick produced 115m pounds of copper during the third quarter, a 15% improvement over 2016 but costs rose by more than 10% to to $2.24 per pound. The company narrowed its copper production guidance range to 420-440 million pounds but expects costs to rise further as a result of higher inputs at its Zambian operations.

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Rhodium price surges to six-year high

Rhodium price surges to six-year high

Roaring rhodium. Image: Shutterstock

The price of rhodium has more than doubled this year, adding $1,000 an ounce since hitting 12-year lows mid-2016.

Like its sister metals, rhodium's main application is to clean vehicle emissions and the price quoted by Johnson Matthey, the world's number one manufacturer of autocatalysts, on Wednesday hit $1,650 an ounce, a six year high.

Due to rarity, the small size of the market and concentrated supply – South Africa alone produces roughly 80% of the world's rhodium – prices are typically volatile.

Rhodium (and sister metal ruthenium) stands out when it comes to price swings – rhodium touched $10,025 an ounce just before the 2008 financial crisis hit, but would drop 90% before the end of that tumultuous year.

South African producers bled their stocks dry to achieve a balance in the market last year

"The South African producers bled their stocks dry to achieve a balance (in the market) last year," Johnson Matthey's Rupen Raithatha told Reuters on Wednesday.

Robust car sales in China and the US, where gasoline vehicles dominate, coupled with rising emissions standards worldwide has been a boost for the metal.

Rhodium and palladium finds application in gasoline vehicles while diesel-powered mostly use platinum for autocatalysts. Platinum at $925 an ounce is trading flat in 2017, while palladium has surged more than 40%, breaching $1,000 last week for the first time since 2001.

Rhodium has also benefitted from speculative demand. Deutsche Bank launched a rhodium exchange traded fund as far back as 2011 while South Africa's Standard Bank listed its own physically-backed rhodium ETF at the end of 2015.

South African PGM producers extract a mix of metals comprising roughly 60% platinum, 30% palladium and 10% rhodium.

Ruthenium prices have also been moving with the metal trading at $100 this week after languishing in double digits since end-2012. Ruthenium, used in the aerospace industry thanks to a very high melting point and in distinctive jet black jewellery, peaked in 2007 shy of $900 an ounce.

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Freeport stock is getting hammered

Shares in Freeport McMoRan Inc (NYSE:FCX), the world's second largest copper producer, were clobbered on Wednesday as investors ignored the release of third quarter results that handily beat Wall Street estimates to focus on the company's ongoing negotiations with Indonesia over the future of its Grasberg mine.

After initial gains, Freeport quickly turned lower losing as much 4.9% by mid day in heavy trade of more than 18m shares. Freeport is worth $21.1 billion on the New York Stock Exchange, just holding onto a double-digit percentage gain for the year.

Phoenix Arizona-based Freeport achieved better than expected third quarter revenues of $4.31 billion and adjusted profit of 34 cents a share for the three-month period, beating analyst expectations of 31 cents.

Freeport recorded sales of 932 million pounds (422,000 tonnes) of copper and 355,000 ounces of gold, below its already lowered forecast made in July. Freeport maintained its 2017 annual sales forecast of 3.7 billion pounds of copper (1.68m tonnes) and 1.6 million ounces of gold, a target the company has adjusted downward on two occasions this year.

Freeport remains at loggerheads with the Indonesian government over selling a majority stake in its Grasberg mine  in the remote Papua province, responsible for more than a quarter of the firm's overall copper production.

Freeport agreed a framework to sell 51% of Grasberg with Jakarta at the end of August and in a statement accompanying the results  Richard Adkerson, President and CEO said "the parties have a mutual objective of completing the required documentation during 2017":

“We are encouraged by continued progress in our active negotiations with the Indonesian government regarding our long-term operating rights in Indonesia and remain focused on managing our long-term business for the benefit of shareholders."

Grasberg is on track to produce more than 450,000 tonnes of copper and a staggering 1.6m ounces of gold. Apart from building smelters in the Asian nation, Freeport has committed to spending $1 billion per year for the next five years to move operations underground at Grasberg with block-cave mining set to commence in early 2019.

Freeport has been mining at Grasberg since the early 1970s and currently owns just over 90% of the local subsidiary PT-FI operating the mine. Freeport has been in negotiations to sell down its stake for the better part of a decade, but talks have repeatedly broken down over valuation.

Last year, Freeport offered a 10.6% interest in PT-FI that valued Grasberg at $16.2 billion. Jakarta’s counter offer was $630 million. The government is arguing that Grasberg's reserves belong to the state and not the mine operator. Freeport estimates Grasberg's underground reserves currently being developed at 11.8m tonnes of copper and 24m ounces of gold.

"Negotiations in Indonesia matter more than anything else for now," Jefferies and Co analyst Christopher LaFemina said in a note to clients quoted by Reuters:

"While we are encouraged by Freeport's operational performance, progress (or lack thereof) in the company's ongoing negotiations with the government of Indonesia is clearly critical to the FCX investment case."

 


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Villes du futur : Neom, la mégapole high-tech voulue par l'Arabie saoudite

Le prince héritier de l'Arabie saoudite Mohammed ben Salmane Al Saoud a annoncé la construction d'une ville futuriste au nord-ouest du pays, sur les bords de la mer Rouge. Baptisée Neom, cette mégapole promet d'embrasser les dernières technologies en matière d'énergies renouvelables,...

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Astéroïdes dangereux : combien en reste-t-il à découvrir ? Moins que prévu !

Les gros astéroïdes potentiellement dangereux qui croisent la route de la Terre et qui restent encore cachés seraient moins nombreux que dans une précédente estimation. Plus de 880 ont déjà été découverts. Combien en reste-t-il à détecter ?

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Bébés : l'instinct maternel existerait bien

Une nouvelle étude internationale affirme que les pleurs des bébés activent des régions spécifiques du cerveau de leur mère. Ces résultats confortent l’idée de l’existence d’un instinct maternel biologique.

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Mars : les explorateurs de ses lunes pourraient se faire électrocuter

Le plasma du vent solaire provoquerait l'apparition de charges électriques à la surface des lunes de Mars, Phobos et Déimos. Des astronautes, et surtout les équipements, pourraient donc être frappés par des décharges électrostatiques gênantes, à défaut d'être directement mortelles.

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Le premier restaurant sous-marin d'Europe va ouvrir ses portes en Norvège

Le cabinet d'architectes Snøhetta vient d'annoncer un projet de restaurant sous-marin qui sera installé par cinq mètres de fond sur la côte norvégienne. Il s'agit d'une première en Europe.

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Feux de forêt et déforestation : destruction record des surfaces boisées en 2016

Entre déforestation et incendies de forêt, les surfaces boisées du Globe avaient beaucoup souffert en 2015 et surtout 2016, avec un record historique : une surface égale à celle de la Nouvelle-Zélande était partie en fumée. Mais l’année 2017 est en bonne voie pour pulvériser cette performance.

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mardi 24 octobre 2017

Iron ore prices: a story of ups and downs

On Tuesday’s session, iron ore spot markets finished mixed. Lower grades of 58% fines added 0.1% to $36.69 a tonne, greatly outperforming higher grades. The latter, particularly ore with 65% Fe content, fell by 1.5% to $83.60 a tonne.

The premium for iron ore lump, normally used in blast furnaces, also fell to its smallest margin since August 21, to $22 a tonne.

On the bright side, the price for benchmark 62% fines rose 0.7% to $62.42 a tonne, the Metal Bulletin reports. The spike reversed a decline of the same magnitude experienced the previous day.

Today’s numbers left analysts and investors scratching their heads, considering that China’s move to cut steel production to address environmental concerns has pushed higher grade and lump iron ore prices up in the past months.

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Philippines open pit mining ban could be lifted before year end

Roy Cimatu, Philippines environment and natural resources minister, said on Tuesday he is hopeful that a ban on open-pit mining put in place by his predecessor would be lifted before the end of the year.

Cimatu, a former military chief who replaced staunch environmentalist Regina Lopez in May and was confirmed earlier this month, said he will follow recommendations by the Asian country's mining regulator published on Tuesday to lift the ban on open cut mining.

The end of the 10-month old ban would revive major planned mines including Philex Mining’s $1.2bn Silangan copper-gold project in Surigao del Norte and the $6bn Tampakan gold-copper project in South Cotabato which has the potential to become the Philippines' biggest foreign investment.

Sagittarius Mines's Tampakan was formerly owned by  Glencore, but the Swiss giant walked away in 2015 following an open pit mining ban by South Cotabato authorities five years earlier. Tampakan would be the largest mining operation in the Philippines and one of the biggest copper mines in the world with estimated annual production of 375,000 tonnes of copper and 360,000 ounces of gold over its 17-year life.

Under Lopez’s tenure  more than half the mines in the Philippines, the world’s top nickel ore supplier were either forced to shut down or operations suspended. But the latest customs data show Philippines exports of nickel ore to top consumer China jumped 24% last month.

Jakarta on Tuesday also allocated an additional 1.25m of ore exports to its top mining company Antam which this year is targeting exports of 2.7m tonnes of ore and 22,300 tonnes of ferronickel.

Reuters reports Lopez, in a Facebook post on Tuesday, said open pit mines pose "very high risks in tropical and archipelagic countries like the Philippines" which regularly endure strong typhoons:

"The Philippines is not a fit and proper place for open pit mining," she said.

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Chinese coal imports from North Korea plummet

According to Chinese customs data released on Tuesday, the country imported 512,000 tonnes of coal – mainly the steelmaking variety – from North Korea in September. Volumes were down 71.6% from the same month last year as Beijing institutes the latest round of UN  sanctions on the rogue regime.

While the UN Security Council ban on Pyongyang's sale of coal, iron ore, lead, lead ore and seafood are only due to come into force this month, China began to enforce the restrictions in mid-August. The September coal cargoes were valued at $44 million which translates into $86 a tonne, a deep discount to the ruling price for metallurgical coal.

In the past China skirted embargoes against North Korea on humanitarian grounds

Coal imports for the first nine months of 2017 totalled 4.83m tonnes. Last year China imported 22.4 million tonnes of anthracitic coal that can be used as an alternative to coking coal in the steelmaking process from North Korea, a nearly 15% rise from 2015. That placed the Asian country just behind in Australia as China's number two supplier of met coal.

In the past China skirted embargoes against North Korea on humanitarian grounds, saying a ban would hurt ordinary citizens of the impoverished country, but pressure on Beijing has increased as Kim Jong-un's nuclear missile program advances.

Coking coal is trading nearly $140 a tonne below its mid-April peak when the price of jumped to highest since the second quarter of 2011 due to disruptions related to cyclone Debbie in the state of Queensland.

But most producers would probably be happy with today's price around $178. In November 2015, the spot price fell to a record low of $75 a tonne. Coking coal averaged $121 a tonne in 2016 and $90 the year before.

China's imports of iron ore and lead concentrate from North Korea also fell sharply in September, back to levels last seen at the start of the decade according to Reuters calculations.

Lead ore and concentrate shipments came in at just 1,321 tonnes, worth $1.18 million, down 84% from a year earlier. Iron ore shipments plunged 98% to just over 3,000 tonnes, worth about $55,000. Chinese exports of gasoline and diesel to North Korea have fallen to close to zero.

 

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