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of Indonesians
March 2010
...The Australian company Indo Mines (formerly Kimberly Diamond) is displacing tens of thousands of farmers and fishers with its iron mine joint venture stretching along 22 kilometres of beach in Kulon Progo, a tsunami zone near Yogyakarta on the South Java Sea.
Thousands of farmers and their supporters have repeatedly made mass protests to the Yogyakarta parliament, the national parliament, the local mayor and provincial governor and the Australian embassy in Jakarta, which has denied that Indo Mines is an Australian company despite it being listed on the Australian stock exchange as Indo Mines Limited. Protesters are calling on the Indonesian government to nullify the joint venture company Jogja Magasa Iron’s contract of work.
While President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was celebrating his second inauguration in Jakarta on October 20, 28 trucks carrying 2000 coastal farmers besieged the office of the mayor of Kulon Progo to protest the planned iron sands mine, which they say will wreck coastal sand hills and vegetation, exposing tens of thousands of people to possible death by tsunami.
The last major tsunami on the south coast of Java, on July 17, 2006, killed more than 600 people. According to the NGO Mining Advocacy Network, “The extraction of iron puts the livelihoods of 123,601 local farmers and fishers at risk”.
The protesters refused the public consultation offered by the 70% Australian-owned company and rejected all plans to proceed with the mine, viewing the consultation as a strategy to aid the company’s plans. Indonesian police fired bullets and tear gas into the crowd, injuring 41 people, five seriously. Protesters took a petition to the Indonesian consulate in Melbourne on January 11 this year.
The Australian government remains silent about the victims of Australian corporate operations. Ignoring both the Sidoarjo and Kulon Progo cases, the Australian ambassador to Indonesia, Bill Farmer, in a media release promoting the Ozmine 2008 conference, claimed:
“Australian companies have delivered real benefits for the development of the mining sector in Indonesia, and have the potential to do much more, including in areas such as environmental sustainability”.
hat jemand mehr Infos über diese Problematik?
directaction.org.au/issue20/australian_mining_companies_displace_thousands_of_indonesians
NTPC Considers Stake Buys in Indonesia Coal Mines
MUMBAI -- State-run NTPC Ltd. is considering buying stakes in two coal mines in Indonesia with coal resources of about 1.8 billion metric tons in the current financial year, to secure coal supplies for its power plants, said Chairman R.S. Sharma Monday.
India's domestic coal production is expected to rise over the next few years, but will still fall short of the power sector's massive demand, forcing companies such as NTPC to increasingly rely on imported coal.
The anticipated shortfall in domestic coal is also prompting power companies to secure coal assets in Indonesia, Mozambique and Australia.
"We are taking a view on two coal mines in Indonesia. (One is located) southeast of Kalimantan with 1 billion tons of coal resources and (the other is located at) Sumatra with 800 million tons," Mr. Sharma said.
NTPC is focussing on Australia and Indonesia for acquisitions, he said.
Coal from the Indonesian mines is high in moisture content and so the Indian company is studying ways to use the coal through processes such as blending, Sharma said.
"We will take a call (on how to use the coal)," he said. Mr. Sharma added that he hopes the deals will be finalized by March.
NTPC currently has a generation capacity of 32,194 megawatts and expects to touch a generation capacity of 75 gigawatts by 2017.
By 2032, it is targeting 128 GW in capacity generation.
Largely a coal-based power producer, the company has made a small foray into renewable energy, while it gets coal supplies from state-run Coal India Ltd.
The power producer needs about 155 million tons of coal in the current financial year that began April 1, of which it plans to import 12 million tons to meet the needs of its power plants.
The company's coal imports may grow to 15 million tons next year as its coal demand will likely rise to 165 million tons.
NTPC plans to invite offers from overseas miners willing to sell a stake in their mines and plans to meet 40%-60% of its imported coal needs through direct imports, Sharma said.
NTPC has been importing coal through state-trading firms State Trading Corp. and Mines and Minerals Trading Corp, but will shortly float a tender to import coal directly for the first time to meet its needs for the next financial year.
NTPC has signed an initial pact with Bangladesh Power Development Board to form an equal joint venture to set up two 1,320 megawatt power plants in Bangladesh for about 140 billion rupees ($2.99 billion), India's Power Secretary P. Uma Shankar said Monday.
Mr. Shankar said that feasibility studies for the power plants--planned at Khulna and Chittagong--are expected by January, 2011.
According to World Bank's 2010 economic update, the estimated demand-supply gap for power in Bangladesh is about 2,000 MW during peak hours.
NTPC also expects to sign a pact for a 500 MW coal-fired power plant in Sri Lanka.
Meanwhile in India, NTPC's Sharma said the company has offered a stake in its 350 MW gas-based Kayamkulam power plant in the southern state of Kerala to Qatar Petroleum in exchange for gas supplies.
India faces a gas deficit and is trying to ramp up supplies to meet demand from various sectors, including power.
"We are expanding our Kayamkulam power plant by 1,050 MW and have offered a stake to Qatar Petroleum in the expanded plant," said Mr. Sharma, "the gas that we would get from Qatar could be used for further expansion of Kayamkulam or for some other plants."
NTPC may allow Qatar Petroleum a stake of up to 49% in Kayamkulam, he added.
The Indian company may also sell a stake in its Ratnagiri gas-based power plant to Qatar Petroleum for gas, Mr. Sharma said.
NTPC has a 30% stake in Ratnagiri Gas and Power Pvt. Ltd., while GAIL Ltd. has 30% and the rest is held by institutional shareholders.
cb.iguana2.com/netwealth2/depth/ido
umsatz zieht an und rauf auf die 0,25
Auf wo will keiner veraten was drinsteht , scheint wohl explosiv und exklusiv zu sein...
Scheixxegal, ich hab für meinen Teil die Verluste von vor ein paar Wochen wieder drin.. und bleib long. Die News bzw Spekulationen werden früher oder später sowieso veröffentlicht.
Noch nie gehabt, zum Höchstkurs gekauft, dann mit dick Minus raus und am Boden (hoffentlich) ordentlich zugeschlagen, passt...
Orderbuch war heute Nacht eine halbe Stunde lang BID 0,25 ASK 0,40
Hier ein Kommentar von wolfi 199 aus wo:
im Goldreport geht es um eine evtl. Kooperation mit einem großen Unternehmen...alles Weitere ist im Goldreport zu lesen....
Wenn das so kommt, was hier vermutet wird, ist das unglaublich....
Der 3 grösste Stahlproduzent wird in Indonesien zukünftig Milliarden investieren.... Welche Firmen darunter sein werden....werden wir dann sehen
sehr interessant:
Board and Management.: 22,6% 37,1m
Anglo Pacific Group: 12,3% 20,1m
Iron Project Vendors: 6,7% 10,9m
TOTAL 41,6% 68,1m
TOP 40 76,7% 124,9m
Damit sollten die meisten Teilchen in festen Händen sein und der Freefloat so um die 23%, ca. 35Mio Stk., liegen. Nach den letzten Handelstagen wahrscheinlich noch ein wenig weniger. Das könnte bald eng werden, aber eng kann manchmal auch ganz schön sein...
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Wertung | Antworten | Thema | Verfasser | letzter Verfasser | letzter Beitrag | |
53![]() | 4.195 | Indo Mines, mehere Giga-Projekte am Laufen | Nukem | Cabeddie | 25.04.21 02:58 | |
74 | 2012 Timeline Rohstoffrennen Teil2 | BioLogic | Duskyshark | 25.04.21 01:19 | ||
15![]() | 72 | Jetzt Eisenaktien kaufen? | Calibra21 | kalle50 | 14.02.13 18:06 | |
21![]() | 30 | Indo Mines - Gesamtüberblick | Calibra21 | karaya 1 | 23.05.12 00:58 | |
2 | Ups da ist wohl was schiefgelaufen... | 102030Fips | DasMünz | 28.06.11 17:47 |