eine Nachricht über die Kali-Mitbewerber.
Zusammenfassend gesagt: Die Konkurrenz hat große Probleme, Kalibergwerke zu bauen und geplante Fördermengen fallen deshalb weg.
Bei Potashinvestingnews.com sind viele Berichte über Kali, leider auf Englisch. Aber es gibt ja google translate. Hier werden viele Hintergründe über andere Produzenten gesagt. Und viele Berichte über Probleme bei Kaliproduzenten. Zum Beispiel Äthopien-Potash, wie unten gesagt in North Dakota (was an K+S Saskatchewan angrenzt,wo es Kali gibt, in North Dakota anscheinend nicht so viel)
auf Englisch.
potashinvestingnews.com/...h-industry-not-ready-to-resume.html
ND Regulator Says Potash Well Site Cleaned Up
BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — North Dakota's nascent potash mining industry, which has drawn scrutiny from state lawmakers and regulators, is not likely to begin production for at least three years, a mining company official said Thursday.
J.T. Starzecki, a senior manager for Dakota Salts LLC, said the state's newly approved 2 percent tax on potash production would not hamper development, although he said the levy was higher than in some other jurisdictions.
"It's a middle-of-the-road policy that gives us a good starting point," Starzecki said. "It could be worse, it could be better, but it's livable. We're comfortable enough to pursue our project based on the landscape as it exists today."
Starzecki spoke Thursday to the North Dakota Legislature's interim Natural Resources Committee.
The panel is studying North Dakota's potential for potash mining and what may be necessary to handle the changes that industry development could bring to rural northwestern North Dakota. The committee will draft a report on its findings this fall.
The Canadian province of Saskatchewan, which borders North Dakota, is the world's largest potash producer. Potash is an ingredient used to make fertilizer; it is used to help grow corn in the United States and is in high demand in Brazil, India and China.
Dakota Salts drilled a test well in December 2010 in Burke County, in North Dakota's northwestern corner, to explore the depth and quality of potash deposits there.
The findings are still confidential, but an official for Dakota Salts' parent company, Sirius Minerals PLC, has said the results were not as promising as hoped, and that Sirius was focused on building a new potash mine in north England.
Starzecki told North Dakota lawmakers on Thursday that the company still hoped to develop the Burke County project and that improved potash processing techniques could make doing so more economically attractive
Grüße
Rafael123