RSS

Tag Archives: coal deposits

Mozambique to develop fuel from coal project‏

The Mozambique government, through the  Ministry of Energy, has signed a development agreement with Clean Carbon Industries LDA (CCI) a joint venture between Twin City Venture Capital, Hugh Brown & Associates, local Mozambique shareholders and a team  of international engineering specialists to undertake a full feasibility study into the construction of a plant to produce 40,000 barrels of  transport fuel and chemical by-products from lower grade coal in the  Mozambique Tete Basin.
The study, which is already in the final stages of pre-feasibility is well advanced, having commenced in concept in February 2011. The  bankable feasibility study will be completed by the end of 2014 and  subject to final viability, financial closure is expected by October  2015, enabling construction to start in the first quarter of 2016.

The Tete Basin, in Tete Province northwest Mozambique has very  extensive coking, thermal and low grade resources of coal. The companies Vale (Brazil), Rio Tinto  Group (UK) and Ncondezi Coal Company Limited  (UK) amongst others are advanced in exploring, developing, constructing  and commissioning new coal mines in the area, with a total of almost  US$4 billion having been invested to date in the basin, with Vale  exporting its first coal to overseas markets in November last year via  Beira Port.

In August  2011, the Mozambique government gave the green light to  Clean Carbon Industries LDA to commence work on the project and in March 2012 signed a Memorandum of Agreement with CCI for the development of  the project. CCI  has been working with Ncondezi Coal Company on coal  supply, Lurgi GmbH (Germany) testing coals and developing concept  technology designs and project configurations for the final stage  prefeasibility study.
The key advantages of the project include cheap feedstock, as it will consume coal that is not of a quality suitable for export or sale, thus reducing the increasing stockpile of this coal derived from the  increased mining of coking and thermal coal in the Tete Basin.

The  project will consume up to 17 million tonnes of coal per annum and will  therefore make a large contribution to reducing environmental problems  and costs associated with sequestrating waste coals in the Basin. By  producing fuel in Mozambique, the project will save the country millions in foreign exchange currently spent on importing transport fuels.
After taking delivery of low grade coal on site, the plant will  gasify the coal and convert it into liquid fuels and chemicals. The  government of Mozambique has first call on  the first 20,000 barrels per day produced by the plant (Mozambique currently utilises approximately  17,000 bbls / day)  leaving excess capacity to be exported to Tanzania,  Malawi, Zambia, Botswana and other regional SADC countries and/or be  converted to chemical feedstock for export. The close proximity of the  Tete basin to Malawi, Zimbabwe, and Tanzanian markets, should  extensively reduce the transportation cost of fuel to these markets.

A  pipeline is planned to transport white products from Tete to Savane on  the Indian Ocean north of Beira via a servitude to a terminal which  forms part of the agreement with government so that these products may  be transported to the existing port fuel handling facilities Mozambique  has in Pemba, Beira, Quelimane and Maputo.
The minister of energy, Dr  Salvador Numburete is very positive about the project.
“Few may remember the advantages of the  construction of Cahora Bassa dam nearly 40 years ago. Not only did it create jobs for many people of Mozambique, but it  contributed to the energy infrastructure of the country and provided for an export product in the form of electricity.

The CCI CTL project  provides Mozambique with an opportunity to use its low grade coal,  improve its environmental footprint and save foreign exchange.”

About these ads
 
1 Comment

Posted by on July 7, 2012 in Business News

 

Tags: , , , ,

Mongolia Flooded With Millionaires from Minerals

 

 

Mongolian Tughrik banknotes

Mongolian Tughrik banknotes

 

 

 

 

 

 

Sitting in his traditional tent, Khaidav, a retired teacher, dreams of the  wooden house he will build after one million tughrik ($760) lands in his bank account this summer.
More than a million Mongolians like Khaidav, who goes by one name,  will become tughrik millionaires as they sell shares in Tavan Tolgoi – the world’s third-biggest coking coal deposit which is helping fuel the country’s resources boom – to the government.
Mongolia, a resource-rich country of 3m people with a per capita  gross domestic product of less than $5,000, has introduced policies to  share its growing mineral wealth with its citizens.

One measure involved spreading 20 per cent of the shares in Tavan Tolgoi  among the entire population. Until recently, people were unable to cash  in because the planned public listing of the mine has been delayed.
But in May, ahead of parliamentary elections slated for next week,  the government offered citizens a choice: sell their stake back to the  state for one million tugrik or keep the shares and wait for the public  listing.

More than half of the country opted for the cash, handing the  government a bill of roughly $1bn, or a tenth of the country’s GDP.  However, many Mongolian elites criticise the handouts as premature  because the mine, which is barely developed, has yet to produce the  revenues that are expected.
Politicians have defended the buyback programme, saying they are just giving Mongolians a chance to participate in the mineral wealth.
“That was our biggest election campaign [promise] in 2008, and we  fulfilled it,” said Chimed Saikhanbileg, a candidate for the Democratic  party. “Every citizen in Mongolia now owns 1,072 shares of Tavan Tolgoi, the equivalent of one million tugrik.”
The Democratic party will next week face off against the Mongolian  People’s party in parliamentary elections that will determine who  governs the country for the next four years.

The two centre-left parties who are campaigning on similar platforms, including using mining  revenues to benefit ordinary citizens, have ruled together in a  coalition for most of the past four years.

Tavan Tolgoi was supposed to set the standard for how the country  would handle its mineral resources. Instead, it has become a cautionary  tale, as the project has been delayed by politics in Ulan Bator and by  geopolitical wrangling between China, Russia and other countries that  want to play a part in its development.
The listing has also been delayed by uncertain global markets and the slow progress producing a new Mongolian securities law that will create the legal framework necessary for the three-city listing.
Mongolia is trying to wean itself off of the handout culture that  flourished in previous elections, in which campaigns competed for who  could promise the most cash to voters. After passage of a new election  law, candidates are now barred from making election promises about money or employment.

Tavan Tolgoi is a good example of how election promises can lead to  mismanagement. As the government buys the Tavan Tolgoi shares back, it  will resell some to Mongolian companies for the same price to reduce its bill.
“The 2008 campaigns were about who will give more cash. It cost us  quite dear in the last four years because there was no money to  implement this,” says Oyun Sanjaasuren, head of the Civil Will Green  party, which opposes cash handouts.

“Tavan Tolgoi is quite a big,  complicated equation, with a lot of unknowns still, like how do we deal  with geopolitics, neighbours, and strategic investors.”
Other critics say the buyback scheme is taking badly needed cash away from the mine, which is very short of cash, mainly because it still  produces only a small fraction – 4m tonnes a year – of its potential  output.

 
Leave a comment

Posted by on June 21, 2012 in International News

 

Tags: , , , , , , , , , ,

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 3,603 other followers

%d bloggers like this: