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Australia signs huge China coal deal

#1 User is offline   Silver Surfer 

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Posted 06 February 2010 - 06:27 PM

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Australia signs huge China coal deal

An Australian firm has signed a $60bn (AUS$69bn; £38bn) deal to supply coal to Chinese power stations.

Clive Palmer, chairman of the company, Resourcehouse, said it was Australia's "biggest ever export contract".

Under the deal, the firm will build a new mining complex to give China Power International Development (CPI) 30m tonnes of coal a year for 20 years.

Analysts say it is further evidence of China's strong demand for resources boosting Australia's economy.

Most of China's power stations rely on coal - and demand has risen sharply in recent months after a government stimulus programme re-energised its economy.

Knock-on effects

The plan involves building a huge new mining complex in the Australian state of Queensland, and laying 500km (311 miles) of railway line to move the coal to the coast.

Resourcehouse's executive director, Phil McNamara, said the "once-in-a-century project" would include open-cast and underground mines, with construction likely to begin later this year.

The complex in the Galilee basin, to be called China First, is expected to start coal production in 2013 and will churn out some 40 million tonnes a year.

Queensland state premier Anna Bligh anticipates the project will create tens of thousands of jobs and produce multi-million dollar royalty payments for the state government.

But the lucrative Sino-Australian deal will almost certainly disappoint some environmental groups, says the BBC's Phil Mercer in Sydney.

They believe Australia's reliance on plentiful reserves of coal, both for domestic electricity generation and for export, should be reduced in favour of renewable sources of energy.

Analysts say the deal signals a thaw between the two nations, following a string of incidents in 2009 that strained relations, from the arrest in Shanghai of an Australian mining executive from Rio Tinto to the high-profile visit to Australia of Uihgur activist leader Rebiya Kadeer.

An attempt by the state-owned resources company, Chinalco, to buy into the Anglo-Australia mining giant, Rio Tinto, also ended in acrimony.



http://news.bbc.co.u...fic/8501777.stm
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#2 User is offline   tom 

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Posted 07 February 2010 - 01:02 PM

I suppose they are trying to restore some of the balance to the mass in foreign currency they are stacking.

If I were in teh central government in China I would be asking to pay up front to offload the US$
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#3 User is offline   Bernard L. Madoff 

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Posted 07 February 2010 - 01:19 PM

http://www.theaustra...6-1225827378742

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Palmer secures Australia's "biggest" export deal with China
MINING magnate Clive Palmer says his company has secured Australia's biggest export deal with a $A69.39 billion agreement to sell coal to China.

The Resourcehouse chairman on Saturday said the company's proposed China First coal mine and infrastructure project in central Queensland had reached a 20-year agreement with one of China's largest power companies, China Power International Development, the flagship company of China Power Investment Corporation (CPI).

"This deal with CPI is Australia's biggest ever export contract," Mr Palmer said in a statement.

Mr Palmer also said he had awarded Queensland's largest engineering, procurement and construction management contract (EPCM) for $A9.27 billion to Metallurgical Corporation of China Ltd (MCC).

"MCC will manage a syndicated group consisting of Sino Coal International Engineering Group, China Communications Construction Company (First Harbour) and China Railway Group Limited (CREC) to build Australia's largest coal mine along with the required export infrastructure," he said.



"The $A9.25 billion China First Project has been developed by China First Pty Ltd, which is a fully-owned subsidiary of Resourcehouse."

Resourcehouse executive director Phil McNamara, in the statement, said: "The contract with CPI was to supply 30 million tonnes per annum (MTPA) for approximately $A3.47 billion per annum over 20 years".

Putting aside political differences to stand alongside Queensland Premier Anna Bligh to announce the deal, Mr Palmer told reporters in Brisbane on Saturday it would create thousands of jobs in Queensland and most likely restore the state's AAA credit rating.

The coal will be mined from the Galilee Basin region near Alpha, west of Emerald. A private 495-kilometre rail line will be built and new jetties and ports erected at Abbott Point, near Bowen.

The royalties from the sales are expected to tip more some $700 million into the government's coffers per annum from 2014, while creating 7,500 direct jobs and 50,000 to 60,000 indirect jobs.

Mr Palmer - who is a life member of the state opposition Liberal National Party (LNP), a former state director of the National Party, and who is suing Ms Bligh for defamation - said the Export-Import Bank of China had financed a $US5.6 billion ($A6.48 billion) loan but emphasised the project was 100 per cent Australian owned.

"When you need a lot of money there is no better place to get it than in China," Mr Palmer told reporters.

"This is Australia's largest single, non-syndicated, finance deal and the interest from China highlights the strength of the project and the benefits for Queensland and Australia in developing a new world class coal region such as the Galilee Basin.

"There will be four underground mines and two open cut mines."

Ms Bligh said there was some environmental red tape to negotiate before the project was signed off, but unlike the Traveston Dam debacle, she did not next expect any last minute problems.

"It is world demand which is making it a commercial opportunity," Ms Bligh said.

"It will create tens of thousands of jobs in construction and in operation of the mine, port and rail over that time."

She said the project would revive and revitalise Central Queensland's economy.

More than 100 million extra tonnes of coal could be exported every year from Queensland with a total of $25 billion of new projects under consideration by the state government.

The project is expected to start later this year.

Chinese firms getting the construction gig? How fucked is that?

Make it a requirement that Australian firms get the gig Krudd you limp dick.


Posted Image
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#4 User is offline   tom 

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Posted 07 February 2010 - 01:51 PM

Oh yippee another induction where they will teach us the sensibilities of working for the Chinese.
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#5 User is offline   goethe 

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Posted 07 February 2010 - 02:14 PM

So much for trying to lower Australia's carbon footprint.
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#6 User is offline   Bernard L. Madoff 

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Posted 07 February 2010 - 02:26 PM

View Postgoethe, on 07 February 2010 - 02:14 PM, said:

So much for trying to lower Australia's carbon footprint.


Before taking their seat new parliamentarians take an oath that goes...

Quote

I,[ ] do swear that I will be faithful and bear true allegiance to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Second, Her heirs and successors according to law. So help me God.


They then mutter...

"I will be a hypocritical c*nt for the duration of my stay and tell the population what they want to hear and put re-election and political expediancy above all else. So help me Gough/Rodent (insert as applicable)"

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#7 User is offline   boz 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 04:54 AM

China Power denies mega-deal with Palmer firm
it is getting a bit spooky...:unsure:
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#8 User is offline   Charles Bukowski 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 05:11 AM

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China Power International has denied it has signed a $US60 billion ($A69.38 billion) deal to buy coal from Australian miner Resourcehouse.


Yes very odd :P
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#9 User is offline   satanoperca 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 07:52 AM

They have signed a letter of intend to discuss exclusively further business dealings, no more and no less.

But the real question that comes to mind is why hasn't the govnuts come out celebrating this potentially huge export windfall for QLD and greater Australia.

Could it be that selling a known pollutant (carbon emitter) on mass while trying to get an ETS scheme up and running through parliament seems quite ironic and contradictory.

Maybe I should look it another way, have Clive seems you are going to make a mint out of this deal if it comes to reality you can sponsor the govnuts ETS scheme so the average Aussie is not lumbered with 100% of the cost.

Cheers
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#10 User is offline   Mr Medved 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 08:24 AM

View Postboz, on 09 February 2010 - 04:54 AM, said:


Maybe all those Chinese companies look alike to Clive... :blush:
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#11 User is offline   Charles Bukowski 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 08:48 AM

I remember reading an interview with REIWA president Alan Bourke where he stated that the problem with WA is that we act like things that are far off in the horizon are happening now.
Looks like all boom towns suffer the same plight.
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#12 User is offline   Charles Bukowski 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 08:50 AM

View Postsatanoperca, on 09 February 2010 - 07:52 AM, said:



But the real question that comes to mind is why hasn't the govnuts come out celebrating this potentially huge export windfall for QLD and greater Australia.

Could it be that selling a known pollutant (carbon emitter) on mass while trying to get an ETS scheme up and running through parliament seems quite ironic and contradictory.





Seems like everything that is saving Australia, is really only saving jobs and real estate, and maybe, everything that is saving Australia, is damaging Australia :P
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#13 User is offline   Mr Medved 

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Posted 09 February 2010 - 09:54 PM

View PostMr Medved, on 09 February 2010 - 08:24 AM, said:

Maybe all those Chinese companies look alike to Clive... Posted Image


Looks like my simple joke may have been closer to the truth than I thought...

http://www.abc.net.a.../09/2814948.htm

The company's statement said it did not have an agreement with Resourcehouse and it warned shareholders and potential investors to exercise caution when dealing with the Australian company.

Then Mr Palmer issued a correction - it seemed he had accidentally named the wrong Chinese company. It was in fact China Power International Holding with which he had done the deal.
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#14 User is offline   Bernard L. Madoff 

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Posted 10 February 2010 - 12:29 AM

You sign a deal with 7 zeroes in it and you forget who the client is?

Its does smell a little rancid..

Maybe he just wants to dump his speculative real estate in Bowen, Townsville Rocky and Gladstone and needed a spruik boost. :laugh:
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