Southern Copper says 2nd-qtr profit rose to $313 mln

July 28 (Reuters) – Southern Copper (SPC.LM)(SCCO.N) posted a second-quarter consolidated net profit of $313 million late Wednesday, a rise of 79 percent from the same period a year ago as metals prices improved.

The company, which operates mines in Mexico and Peru, said second-quarter sales were $1.17 billion, up 42 percent from the year-ago quarter.

The company’s owner, Grupo Mexico (GMEXICOB.MX), said last week it planned to merge its Arizona-based miner Asarco with Southern Copper to cut costs. It pulled the U.S. miner out of bankruptcy last year. [ID:nN23101823]

Combining Asarco with Southern Copper would increase savings between the two units and give Southern Copper shareholders exposure to Asarco’s growth potential, Grupo Mexico said in a regulatory filing last week. Grupo Mexico owns all of Asarco and 80 percent of Southern Copper.

The plan assigned a $6 billion value to Asarco, which went into bankruptcy under the heavy burden of environmental complaints around its mining operations in the United States.

INVESTMENTS

Grupo Mexico recently won back control of the largest copper mine in Mexico, Cananea, which was paralyzed by a nearly three-year-long strike. The company retook Cananea with the help of federal police earlier this year after a long fight with the union in Mexican courts and is aiming to achieve some copper production by the end of this year.

As reported previously, with a $3.8 billion investment over the next five years, Grupo Mexico hopes to increase Cananea’s annual production by 150 percent to 450,000 tonnes.

The uptick in production will come from expansion at the mine to raise copper capacity by 270,000 tonnes. Cananea also will boost its molybdenum output, the company said. (Reporting by Patricia Velez and Terry Wade; Editing by Valerie Lee)

REFILE-UPDATE 3-BHP iron ore output record, cautious on outlook

(Changes subsequent references to Credit Suisse economist to Tao)

* BHP’s Q4 iron ore output up, copper down

* Full-year iron output at record 124.9 mln tonnes

* Says cautious on outlook as governments tighten belts

* Says Olympic Dam copper mine returning to normal output * Escondida copper, Cerro Matoso nickel output to drop (Adds more details, analyst quotes, updates share price)

By James Regan

SYDNEY, July 21 (Reuters) – BHP Billiton (BHP.AX)(BLT.L), the world’s biggest mining house, reported a 16 percent jump in quarterly iron ore output on Wednesday, taking annual production to a record, but cautioned over uncertainties surrounding the short-term outlook for commodities markets.

Mounting concerns of a slowdown in recovery in western economies and a waning appetite for industrial raw materials from China — the world’s top consumer of industrial metals — could hit suppliers such as BHP, Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) (RIO.L), Xstrata (XTA.L) and other sector behemoths beefing up output.

“Uncertainty surrounds the near-term prospects for growth in the developed world as governments adjust fiscal policies following a period of significant stimulus and subsequent increase in sovereign debt levels,” BHP said in its June quarter production report.

“Within China, measures introduced to reduce growth to more sustainable levels means volatility in commodity end-demand is likely to persist.”

China, which accounts for about 25 percent of BHP and Rio’s revenue, saw its economic growth moderate in the second quarter, a slowdown likely to continue for the rest of the year as Beijing steers monetary and fiscal policy back to normal after a record credit surge to counter the global crisis. [ID:nTOE66D06L]

According to Dong Tao, chief non-Japan Asia economist at Credit Suisse, the slowdown is much more severe and relevant to countries such as Australia that sell commodities to China.

“What’s behind the slowdown? There’s a drastic inventory correction in the steel sector, and that’s being led by moderation in infrastructure investment,” Tao said.

Until now, analysts have suggested mining companies needed to increase productivity to capture the booming China trade as well as returning demand in the west, particularly for iron ore.

BHP and Rio are spending billions of dollars on so-called “rapid growth projects” in iron ore mining. The two are also aiming to form a joint venture to integrate their separate iron ore businesses in Australia to improve production runs and save $10 billion in repetitive costs.

The partnership still needs approvals from competition regulators.

RECORD IRON ORE OUTPUT

The rise in BHP’s quarterly iron ore output brought annual production from the world’s third largest producer of the steel-making raw material to 124.96 million tonnes, up 9 percent.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For a table on BHP production, click on [ID:nSGE66J004]

For a graphic: r.reuters.com/kad68m ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

The world’s second-largest iron ore producer, Rio last week posted a 2 percent drop in June quarter production but still forecast record output of 234 million tonnes in calendar 2010. [ID:nSGE66D07K]

Rio ranks ahead of BHP Billiton and behind Vale (VALE5.SA) of Brazil in terms of iron ore production.

“They (BHP) are cautious but not throwing in the towel,” said Peter Chilton, analyst at Constellation Capital Management, which owns BHP shares.

“But I think they’re a little bit more cautious than Rio.”

Credit Suisse’s Tao said BHP and Rio needed to voice caution because they think there might be a mismatch between analysts’ expectations and the reality on the ground.

“Chinese demand over the next 12 to 18 months is not going to be as bullish as many people believe” Tao said. “Certainly we shouldn’t be benchmarked against China’s performance over the past five years,” Tao said.

Both BHP and Rio earlier this year threatened to curb growth in iron ore production under a 40 percent Australian “super profit” tax proposed to start in 2012. The tax has since been watered down to 30 percent, which the companies say will not stunt expansion plans.

A decline in iron ore prices has led some analysts to suggest producers such as BHP Billiton, Rio Tinto, Fortescue Metals (FMG.AX) and Vale might rethink production schedules this year. But iron ore prices were now showing signs of bottoming, according to ANZ Bank.

Spot prices .IO62-CNI=SI have remained steady at $118-$120 a tonne for the past week after falling consistently for a month. “A key positive catalyst will be a recovery in Chinese steel prices, which still continue to slide,” said Mark Pervan, head of commodities research for ANZ Bank.

BHP closed up 1.2 percent at A$38.75, outpacing more modest gains in the wider market .AXJO.

COPPER OUTPUT DROPS

BHP, the world’s second-largest copper producer after Chile’s Codelco [CODEL.UL], said fourth-quarter output dropped 5 percent from a year ago, with the company forecasting its Olympic Dam mine operating at full production in the current quarter.

Olympic Dam had been running at only a fifth of its 200,000-tonnes-a-year capacity since a mine accident in October.

It noted a strong performance during the last quarter at its 57.5 percent-owned Escondida, Spence and Cerro Colorado copper mines in Chile. But Escondida production is expected to decline by 5-10 percent this year, mainly due to mining of less rich ore.

Rio holds a 30 percent interest in Escondida, the world’s biggest copper mine. JECO Corp, a consortium formed by Mitsubishi Corp (8058.T), Mitsubishi Materials (5711.T) and Nippon Mining & Metals, owns 10 percent and the World Bank has 2.5 percent. BHP also said it was assessing the impact of the six-month suspension of oil drilling in the Gulf of Mexico after Washington in May ordered a temporary halt to 33 exploration rigs as part of a broader response to the BP (BP.L) oil spill.

Drilling at BHP’s Atlantis and Shenzi projects in the Gulf of Mexico were halted as a result.

BHP said it ran its Australian Nickel West division at record levels in 2009/10, enabling it to draw down most of a surplus stockpile of concentrate.

However, during the second half of the 2011 financial year, production from its Cerro Matoso, Colombia nickel division will drop due to a planned replacement of one of its two furnaces. (Additional reporting by Sonali Paul in MELBOURNE; Editing by Himani Sarkar)

Consumer Reports magazine said on Wednesday that Apple iPhone 4 owners can eliminate reception problems by enclosing their phones in the “Bumper” case Apple sells.

July 15 (Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed Zijin Mining Group on Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin (2899.HK) (601899.SS) suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter”.

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.89 million kg — were killed by the 9,100 cubic metres of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports. [ID:nTOE66D075]

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue colour and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

The Chinese government has become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminium producers. [ID:nTOE66E022]. (Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

China newspaper slams mining firm after spill

(Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed a major mining firm Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin Mining Group suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter.”

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.9 million kg (4.2 million lb) — were killed by the 9,100 cubic meters (321,400 cu ft) of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports.

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue color and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

China has been battling to control the damage to its environment caused by more than three decades of breakneck economic growth, from acid rain to desertification.

The China Daily Thursday cited a survey in the booming southern province of Guangdong as saying 40 percent of its soil was contaminated by heavy metals, partly caused by the more than 3,000 mines operating there.

The government has also become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminum producers.

(Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

China newspaper slams mining firm after spill

BEIJING/HONG KONG, July 15 (Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed a major mining firm on Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin Mining Group (2899.HK) (601899.SS) suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter”.

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.9 million kg (4.2 million lb) — were killed by the 9,100 cubic metres (321,400 cu ft) of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports. [ID:nTOE66D075]

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue colour and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

China has been battling to control the damage to its environment caused by more than three decades of breakneck economic growth, from acid rain to desertification.

The China Daily on Thursday cited a survey in the booming southern province of Guangdong as saying 40 percent of its soil was contaminated by heavy metals, partly caused by the more than 3,000 mines operating there.

The government has also become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminium producers. [ID:nTOE66E022] (Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Alex Richardson)

UPDATE 1-China newspaper slams mining firm after spillUPDATE 1-China newspaper slams mining firm after spill

July 15 (Reuters) – One of China’s leading newspapers slammed Zijin Mining Group on Thursday for its poor handling of a poisonous leak at a copper mine, as the company said it would cooperate with regulators in an investigation.

Zijin (2899.HK) (601899.SS) suspended trading of its shares on Monday after news broke about the spill of wastewater containing acidic copper from its Zijinshan Copper Mine, into the Ting river in the southeastern province of Fujian.

But the contamination began much earlier, on the afternoon of July 3, and the public was initially kept in the dark about the spill, which went on for nearly 24 hours.

Communist Party mouthpiece the People’s Daily said the company explained that it did not report the accident earlier as “they thought it was just as small matter”.

“How can a company like Zijin Mining, which is an industry with a high risk of pollution, not take a ‘small problem’ seriously?” the newspaper said in a commentary.

“In industries with a high risk of pollution, small problems are the hidden dangers that lead to large accidents, and you can’t ever just count on your luck,” it added.

The company said it it would fully cooperate in a probe into the spill after receiving a notice from the Fujian Regulatory Bureau of the China Securities Regulatory Commission regarding the incident. It gave no other details.

Thousands of fish — a total 1.89 million kg — were killed by the 9,100 cubic metres of waste water that escaped from a mine containment tank, according to state media reports. [ID:nTOE66D075]

Though water from the river has been declared safe to drink, the 60,000 people affected by the spill are still wary, because the river is a chemical blue colour and smells unpleasant.

Villagers are now drawing their water from wells, but worry even those may be polluted. The firm has halted production and said it would compensate fish farmers for their losses.

The Chinese government has become increasingly worried about public anger at environmental problems, especially pollution.

“Mass incidents” — or riots and protests — sparked by environmental problems have been rising at a rate of 30 percent per year, according to China’s environmental protection minister.

Earlier this week more than 1,000 people threw rocks at police and blocked roads in southern China in protest at pollution from a plant owned by one of the country’s largest private aluminium producers. [ID:nTOE66E022]. (Reporting by Donny Kwok in Hong Kong and Ben Blanchard in Beijing; Editing by Sugita Katyal)

UPDATE 1-Rio Q2 iron ore output dips, flags China fears

SYDNEY, July 14 (Reuters) – Rio Tinto (RIO.AX) (RIO.L) on Wednesday reported a 2 percent fall in second-quarter iron ore production from a year ago and raised concern of a possible double-dip recession in OECD countries and a slight slowdown in Chinese growth.

The diversified miner, the world’s no.2 producer of the steel making raw material, also said it was running its iron ore mines close to capacity and forecast total 2010 production of 234 million tonnes.

“2010 continues to shape up well for Rio Tinto and we are driving our operations at close to capacity,” Chief Executive Tom Albanese said in the company’s second-quarter production summary.

“Markets for most of our products are strong and the overall long-term demand outlook is positive. But in recent weeks, fears about a possible double-dip recession in OECD countries and a slight slowdown in Chinese growth have led to some weakening in sentiment,” Albanese said.

<^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For table on second-quarter production: [ID:nSGE66C0JC]

Graphic here ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^>

Spot iron ore prices .IO62-CNI=SI dropped 10 percent in the second quarter, copper was down 18 percent MCU3 and aluminium MAL3 was off 15 percent.

Rio Tinto said mined copper production dropped 19 percent versus the second quarter of 2009 primarily due to lower ore gradings at its Kennecott Utah Copper mine and Indonesia’s Grasberg mine.

It also warned that low snow and rain levels in the Saguenay region of Quebec in the first half were likely to lead to reduced power generation and a need to purchase power or curtail aluminium production.

“There’s no major surprises in there,” said Michael Bentley, portfolio manager at Northward Capital, which owns Rio Tinto shares.

“In aluminium, I suppose it’s a bit of a concern they’ve got these issues with the power in Canada. But that’s a temporary issue.”

The impact of this on earnings before interest, tax depreciation and amortisation (EBITDA) in the second half of 2010 was expected to be about $100 million, the company said.

At its 30 percent-owned Escondida mine in Chile, second-quarter mined copper was 6 percent up from a year ago, thanks to richer ores and an increase in copper in ore stacked for leaching.

Escondida’s refined copper production declined by 10 percent, in part due to maintenance work, according to Rio Tinto.

Rio Tinto shares traded 0.8 percent higher at A$67.11 at 0559 GMT, underperforming the broader market’s .AXJO 1.6 percent gain.

(Reporting by James Regan and by Sonali Paul; Editing by Ed Davies)

Zijin Mining sewage leak contaminated river -Xinhua

July 12 (Reuters) – A sewage leak from a copper mine owned by Zijin Mining Group Co (2899.HK), whose shares were suspended from trading in Hong Kong on Monday, has polluted a river and reservoir in Fujian province, Xinhua news agency reported.

Xinhua cited environmental authorities as saying the leak from a plant of the Zijinshan Copper Mine had killed or poisoned about 1.89 million kg of fish.

Zijin is building a copper smelter in Fujian with capacity of 200,000 tonnes per year.

A spokesperson for the company was not immediately available for comment. (Additional reporting by Alison Leung in HONG KONG; Editing by Chris Lewis)

David Newbold Appointed CFO at Greystar Resources

VANCOUVER, BRITISH COLUMBIA, Jul 06 (MARKET WIRE) —
Greystar Resources Ltd. (the “Company”) (TSX: GSL)(AIM: GSL) is
pleased to announce the appointment of David Newbold as Chief Financial
Officer (CFO) of the Company effective August, 2010. David, a citizen of
the United Kingdom, has Canadian permanent resident status but will serve
as an international consultant to the Company until pre-employment
clearances are received. Newbold will relocate in August to Vancouver,
British Columbia and assume the role of CFO.

David is a UK chartered accountant with over 36 years of international
experience in mining and finance. He holds a B.Sc. in Mathematics from
the University of East Anglia, United Kingdom. David spent eleven years
(1995-2006) at Placer Dome Inc. where he held positions of increasing
responsibility including Senior Vice President, Commercial; Senior Vice
President Strategy, Placer Dome America; President & CEO, Zaldivar Copper
Mine; and Senior Vice President and CFO, Placer Dome Latin America. Prior
to Placer Dome David spent several years at Outokumpu holding various
finance positions. David most recently was a consultant to companies
assisting them with their overseas business development and mining
investment opportunities.

Steve Kesler, President and CEO of Greystar commented, “We are
delighted to have David join Greystar. David’s experience in the finance
and development of large scale mining projects, particularly in Latin
America, will immediately strengthen the Greystar management team. David
will lead the effort to secure the finance for the Angostura gold and
silver project.”

Greystar also announces that Geoff Chater has stepped down as
Vice-President Corporate Development to return to his consulting
business. Mr. Chater will continue to support the Company as a consultant
and will work closely with Steve Kesler, on current and future
initiatives.

Steve Kesler commented, “Geoff has done a tremendous job for
Greystar initially as a director and consultant and then taking on an
executive position to develop the Company’s relationship with investors.
We look forward to continuing to benefit from his consulting services and
wish him every success in developing his business.”

About Greystar Resources Ltd.

Greystar Resources Ltd. is a precious metals exploration and development
company that is currently completing a feasibility study on its wholly
owned, multi-million ounce Angostura gold-silver deposit in northeastern
Colombia. A positive prefeasibility study announced on March 25, 2009
envisions average annual production at Angostura of 511,000 ounces of
gold and 2.3 million ounces of silver over a 15 year mine life.

Forward-Looking Statements

Certain statements in this news release are “forward-looking”
within the meaning of Canadian securities legislation. They include
statements about the estimated annual production from the Angostura
Project.. Forward-looking statements are necessarily based upon a number
of estimates and assumptions that, while considered reasonable by the
Company, are inherently subject to significant business, economic,
competitive, political and social uncertainties and other contingencies.
Many factors could cause the Company’s actual results to differ
materially from those expressed or implied in the forward-looking
statements. These factors include, among others, conclusions or
realization of mineral resources, the actual results of exploration
activities, possible variations in ore grade or recovery rates,
fluctuations in the price of gold and silver, risks relating to
additional funding requirements, political and foreign risks, production
risks, environmental regulation and liability, government regulation as
well as other risk factors set out under the heading “Risk
Factors” in the Annual Information Form dated March 26, 2010 which
is available on SEDAR at www.sedar.com. Investors are cautioned not to
put undue reliance on forward-looking statements due to the inherent
uncertainty therein.

Neither the Toronto Stock Exchange nor the AIM Market of the London Stock
Exchange has reviewed and neither accepts responsibility for the adequacy
or accuracy of this news release.

Contacts:
Greystar Resources
Geoff Chater
(604) 614-7830
info@greystarresources.com
www.greystarresources.com

Renmark Financial Communications Inc.
John Boidman
Investor Relations Contact
(514) 939-3989 or (416) 644-2020
jboidman@renmarkfinancial.com

Renmark Financial Communications Inc.
Dan Symons
Investor Relations Contact
(514) 939-3989 or (416) 644-2020
dsymons@renmarkfinancial.com
www.renmarkfinancial.com

NCB Stockbrokers Limited
Christopher Caldwell
London NOMAD Contact
+44 (0) 20 7071 5200
christopher.caldwell@ncb.ie

Copyright 2010, Market Wire, All rights reserved.

UPDATE 1-Kazakh copper mine explosion kills three

June 20 (Reuters) – An explosion killed three copper miners in central Kazakhstan on Sunday, mine owner Kazakhmys (KAZ.L) said.

Kazakhmys is the world’s eighth-largest copper miner and its shares trade on the London Stock Exchange.

A company spokeswoman, reading from a news statement, said a fourth miner had also been injured in the explosion, which occurred at about 1000 local time (0400 GMT) at the Stepnoi underground mine in the town of Satpayev, Karagandy region.

Kazakhmys said it had set up a special commission to investigate the cause of the explosion.

Kazakhmys expects to produce about 300,000 tonnes of copper cathode this year. It recently concluded all sales contracts for 2010, signalling strong demand for copper worldwide, including in China, the world’s largest consumer. [ID:nLDE63R1QI] (Reporting by Olga Orininskaya, writing by Robin Paxton; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Kazakh copper mine explosion kills three

ALMATY, June 20 (Reuters) – An explosion killed three copper miners in central Kazakhstan on Sunday, mine owner Kazakhmys (KAZ.L) said.

Kazakhmys is the world’s eighth-largest copper miner and its shares trade on the London Stock Exchange.

A company spokeswoman, reading from a news statement, said a fourth miner had also been injured in the explosion, which occurred at about 1000 local time (0400 GMT) at the Stepnoi underground mine in the town of Satpayev, Karagandy region.

Kazakhmys said it had set up a special commission to investigate the cause of the explosion.

Kazakhmys expects to produce about 300,000 tonnes of copper cathode this year. It recently concluded all sales contracts for 2010, signalling strong demand for copper worldwide, including in China, the world’s largest consumer. [ID:nLDE63R1QI] (Reporting by Olga Orininskaya, writing by Robin Paxton; Editing by Matthew Jones)

Kazakh copper mine explosion kills three – Interfax

June 20 (Reuters) – Three miners died on Sunday in an explosion at a copper miner in Kazakhstan operated by the Central Asian country’s largest miner of the metal, Kazakhmys (KAZ.L), Interfax news agency reported. Interfax-Kazakhstan quoted the manager of Mine No. 67, Serik Aitmukhanov, as saying the explosion occurred at 0950 local time (0350 GMT).

US discovers $1 trillion Afghan mineral deposits-NYT

June 14 (Reuters) – Afghanistan could be holding $1 trillion of untapped mineral deposits including critical industrial metals such as lithium, the New York Times reported, quoting U.S. government officials.

The previously unknown deposits of iron, copper, cobalt and gold are so huge that it could transform the impoverished nation into one of the world’s important mining centres, the report on the newspaper’s website said. (www.nytimes.com/)

The mineral wealth, discovered by a team of Pentagon officials and U.S. geologists, is scattered throughout the country including in the south and east along the border with Pakistan, where the Taliban-led insurgency is the most intense.

“There is stunning potential here,” the newspaper quoted General David Petraeus, commander of the U.S. Central Command, as saying in an interview at the weekend. “There are lots of ifs, of course, but I think potentially it is hugely significant.”

An internal Pentagon memo said Afghanistan could become the “Saudi Arabia of lithium”, the New York Times said. Lithium is a key raw material in the manufacture of batteries for laptops and other electronics such as mobile telephones. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

For more on Afghanistan click [ID:nAFPAK]

or see link.reuters.com/syx62d

Afghan blog: blogs.reuters.com/afghanistan/ ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

Afghanistan does not have any mining industry or infrastructure, so it will take decades for the country to exploit its mineral wealth fully, the paper quoted U.S. officials as saying.

The report about the country’s untapped wealth is likely to intensify competition among regional players such as China, India and even Russia for a greater role in exploiting those resources.

Two Chinese firms have committed themselves to a $4 billion investment in the vast Aynak copper mine, south of Kabul, the biggest non-military foreign investment so far in the country.

Another big contract to mine an estimated 1.8 billion tonnes of high-quality iron ore in the remote mountainous region of Hajigak is expected to open for international bidding this year.

Firms from India and China are eyeing the contract, which the Afghan mines ministry says is the largest unmined iron deposit in Asia.

According to the U.S. study, the biggest deposits discovered so far are of iron and copper and the quantities are large enough to make Afghanistan a major world producer.

Other finds include large deposits of niobium, a soft metal used in producing superconducting steel, rare earth elements and large gold deposits in Pashtun areas of southern Afghanistan.

(Reporting by Sanjeev Miglani; Editing by Paul Tait)

Nominations open in Bougainville election

Nominations have opened in what could be the last elections on the Papua New Guinea island of Bougainville before a referendum on independence.

Writs have been issued for the autonomous Bougainville government’s second elections since a peace agreement ended a decade-long civil war in 2001.

The agreement allowed for a referendum on independence from PNG to be held sometime in the next five years.

President James Tanis is hoping to retain his position and says the referendum will be a major issue.

“The way the vote goes will give an early indication of how the referendum might shape up,” he said.

The future of the derelict Panguna copper mine, which was at the heart of the civil conflict, is also expected to be an important issue during the campaign.

Voting is due to start on May 7.

Cape Lambert off-loads Lady Annie mine

An exploration company has sold its copper mine in north-west Queensland less than a year after it purchased the operation.

Cape Lambert Resources, based in Western Australia, has sold the Lady Annie Mine near Mount Isa for $135 million.

Executive chairman Tony Sage says the company’s objective has always been to develop mines rather than operate them and the sale will bring benefits to the region.

“The first thing though is obviously to get the mining operation – a lot of the services around Mount Isa will be increased, as well with fuel obviously, just groceries and that – that will need to run the camp out there,” he said.

“You have got to feed over 100 people.

“The whole region will get a spin-off effect starting from June right through the end of December.”

He says a Hong Kong listed company purchased Lady Annie and it is expected operations will “ramp up” over the next few months.

“The new owners are operators, they are going to start I would say from the beginning of May to crank everything up,” he said.

“The mining operation will restart and also the processing operation, so the mining operation will start first and they take full control beginning of June.

“You will see a big ramp-up from there.”

Market finishes marginally higher

The Australian share market finished flat on Friday, after initially making gains on a positive lead from Wall Street overnight.

The All Ordinaries Index closed 6 points higher to 4,832 and the ASX 200 ended up a mere 4 points, at 4,818.

It was the big banks that led the gains this morning, before finishing mixed.

The National Australia Bank added 0.56 per cent to close at $26.90 and ANZ gained 0.83 per cent to $24.26.

However, Westpac gave up early gains to lose 0.37 per cent, to $26.90.

Shares in zinc miner CBH Resources surged 28.57 per cent to 18 cents, after Belgian metals group Nyrstar raised its takeover offer by 44 per cent.

Another big mover was Cape Lambert Resources, which gained almost 9 per cent to 48 cents, after it sold its Lady Annie copper mine in Queensland to China Sci-Tech holdings for $135 million.

Elsewhere in the mining sector, Rio Tinto managed a gain of 41 cents to $75.96 but rival BHP Billiton finished the day 16 cents lower, at $42.85.

Goldminer Newcrest closed 0.9 per cent higher at $34.21.

It was a day of losses for the retail sector; Billabong shares slumped 2.48 per cent to $10.60, Wesfarmers lost 0.96 percent to $31.98, and JB Hi-Fi dropped 0.46 per cent to $19.68.

However, Woolworths managed to close 0.49 per cent higher at $28.50.

Commodities and currencies

West Texas crude oil was fetching $US82.21 a barrel around 5:00pm (AEDT) and Tapis was worth $US85.96.

Spot gold was worth $US1,113 an ounce.

Around the same time, the Australian dollar was buying 91.59 US cents.

On the cross rates, it was at 83.01 Japanese yen, 66.89 euro cents, 60.81 British pence and it was worth $1.31 in New Zealand.

UPDATE 1-Key Antofagasta mine restarts after Chile quake

* Los Pelambres mine shut after power disruption

Stocks

* Resumed operations on Sunday, no major problems expected (Adds details, quotes, background)

LONDON, March 1 (Reuters) – Operations at Antofagasta’s (ANTO.L) flagship Los Pelambres copper mine in Chile resumed operations on Sunday after an earthquake temporarily disrupted power supplies, the firm said on Monday.

“Presently it is not expected that Los Pelambres will suffer any significant level of disruption to existing operations but all equipment and infrastructure will be checked as operations restart,” the London-listed mining group said in a statement.

Up to one-fifth of Chile’s copper mine capacity was shut on Saturday after the world’s biggest copper producer was rocked by a huge magnitude-8.8 earthquake, but mines were slowly resuming operations. [ID:nN28209603] [ID:nN27183634]

Los Pelambres, which produced 70 percent of Antofagasta’s total copper cathode output of 442,500 tonnes last year, is located in the Coquimbo region, about 240 km northeast of Santiago. The epicentre of the quake was about 325 km southwest of Santiago.

Antofagasta’s other operations are in the Antofagasta region, about 1,350 km -1,500 km north of Santiago, and were not disrupted.

Last month, the firm posted a 7.4 percent fall in annual copper production, but said production would rise this year due to expansion projects. [ID:nLDE6112DO]

The company is due to post annual financial results on March 9. (Reporting by Eric Onstad; Editing by Rupert Winchester)

Indonesia’s Megawati eyes tougher line on foreign firms

Indonesian opposition leader and presidential candidate Megawati Sukarnoputri said on Friday she would take a tougher stance in contract negotiations with foreign resource firms if elected in July.

Megawati, is a former president who heads the PDI-P party and is standing against incumbent Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono and Vice President Jusuf Kalla in the July 8 presidential vote, which is likely to focus on economic issues.

“We have a real weakness in the way we write our contracts. We are too polite,” she told a meeting of business leaders, citing as an example the huge Grasberg copper mine run by PT Freeport Indonesia, unit of U.S. firm Freeport McMoRan Copper & Gold in Papua, also known as Irian Jaya.

“I went to Freeport and I saw the way the earth is being exploited but the local Irian people are kept down,” she said.

The mine has been a frequent source of controversy over its environmental impact and the share of revenue going to Papuans.

Indonesia is rich in mineral and energy reserves and has a number of global resource firms operating in the country, although the deals are often politically sensitive despite an urgent need for more foreign investment.

Yudhoyono is currently well ahead in opinion polls for the election. Under his administration, Southeast Asia’s biggest economy has had its strongest growth in a more than a decade.

The government has forecast growth will slow to 4-4.5 percent this year, against 6.1 percent growth last year, but still higher than many other Asian countries.

Yudhoyono said on Wednesday that if he was elected for a second term his government could improve the investment climate to lift economic growth to 7 percent by 2014, while Kalla said an administration under him could achieve 8 percent growth.

Megawati declined to give a specific growth number that she could achieve, but said double-digit growth was not impossible.

Yudhoyono’s approval rating in a recent poll of 67 percent, against 12 percent for Megawati and 2 percent for Kalla, makes it almost certain he will win a second term, bar some unexpected blow.