Monday, September 07, 2009

Fuel prices rise as world demand increases

PORTMORESBY, Mon Sept 7: INCREASED international demand for refined fuels has forced up retail prices throughout Papua New Guinea.

Gasoline, diesel and kerosene will rise by about 13 percent for September.

InterOil President Bill Jasper said the higher prices reflect the current volatility of the international marketplace.

“In late August crude oil peaked at around $US73 per barrel, the highest it has been all year.

“However, last month domestic pump prices actually fell in the wake of a decline in international demand,” Mr Jasper said.

“Markets are in a state of flux.

“On one hand there is concern about the continued effects of the global financial crisis.

“On the other, there are signs (including the latest OECD forecast) that the worst may be behind us.

“It is this uncertainty that causes such volatility in the international marketplace and such rapid movement in prices.

“Again we see proof that local fuel prices are determined by global forces and perceptions.

Despite this month’s increases, all fuels remain less expensive throughout Papua New Guinea than they were a year ago.

“Gasoline (ULP), diesel and kerosene are all more than 40 percent cheaper than they were at the beginning of October 2008”, Mr Jasper said.

Mr Jasper said that all refined fuels are currently “very affordable” by historic and international standards.

“And that, in these trying economic times, is positive and welcome news”.

 

For further information contact:

Susuve Laumaea

Senior Manager Media Relations/Public Affairs (PNG)

InterOil Corporation

Ph: (675) 311 2796

Mobile: (675) 7201 3870 or 7 (675) 684 5168

Email: slaumaea@digicelpacific.blackberry.com  or susuve.laumaea@interoil.com

 

Thursday, September 03, 2009

Death notice

Death notice for Mrs Moasing Nalu

Family and friends are advised of the death of my mother, Mrs Moasing Nalu, at Angau Memorial Hospital in Lae on Wednesday, September 2, 2009, at 10.15am.
Aged in her late 60s, she is survived by her children Alison, David, Malum, Lepung and Anna Nalu as well as 14 grand children.
Haus karai (house of mourning) is at our home at Butibam village in Lae.
My mum was a committed Christian until the day she died, and worked with my father, the late Mathias Nalu, all over the country in the colonial pre-independence days.
I will be posting a tribute to my mother on this blog.
Family and friends can contact me on my mobile (675) 6849763.

Tuesday, September 01, 2009

Three articles by James Wanjik

Leadership of position power politics in Papua New Guinea

By James Wanjik

E-mail: jameswanjik@hotmail.com

 

PNG is low on leadership. People are without true leadership. Leaders would have us think otherwise. He who boasts will not see light of truth. For boastfulness is not a true leadership attribute.

Both divides of our Parliament have been tearing each other apart. They are politically aggressive. No human dignity and common courtesy would be their way of moving people. Very sad indeed.

PNG is starved of true leadership. No leader is kind to any other leader. Every leader has more pride than the next leader. Weakness is human skills is covered with position power. Position power is very time-bound. When time is up position power also ends. No leader is invincible. This is the truth.

Person power on the other hand is time-honoured. It will last for as long as a person lives, moves and have his or her being.

Leaders miss opportunity to help leaders work for people. They plot and destroy each other while their people wait in vain for help of their leaders. PNG will only see lot of leaders lose their human dignity because that is what PNG politics is all about.

So far we have seen our leaders’ war of words. Politics of words our leaders are masters. Taking actions to help our people leaders are very timid. They are powerless if they were not Prime Minister or Ministers. It only shows timidity of leaders.

Vision and charisma are two key ingredients of true leadership. No position is required for realising a vision. No position is necessary for charisma. They are formed in mind and heart and are perfected in spirit of a person.

Vision helps a person to see into the future with lessons from past and present. Charisma draws people to the vision. PNG is starting to see people power movement taking shape. It will intensify. When it hits the roof leaders will know they were there for themselves. It is now only a matter of time. Low leadership will go packing. High leadership will delight. It will end leadership of position power politics. Only ending leadership of position power politics will PNG see true leaders serving people regardless of position power.

Long live PNG and may God bless her people.

 

Porgera Landowners’ petition start of activism

By James Wanjik

E-mail: jameswanjik@hotmail.com

 

THESTORY, “Los deliver petition to Temu” (Sunday Chronicle, Sunday, 30 August 2009, p.7 ) highlights damaging undercurrents at Porgera. “No resettlement; no mining” is the summary of the landowners’ petition. The future is hidden in words.

First, landowners say they had sent their petition to the Prime Minister earlier but after a month without a response they re-directed it to Minister for Mining Puka Temu.

Porgera project is the first project in PNG that was offered a development package now commonly referred to as benefits sharing agreement.

It was rushed to cushion the impact of the closure of Panguna mine. When deals are rushed problems are sowed. Porgera has a number of these problems.

1. The government accused the predecessors of Barrick Gold Limited that they had understated the reserve at Porgera to keep government out of equity participation. The Equity Agreement of 1979 was reviewed and increased to 25% from initial 10%.

2. The landowners were relocated within the Special Mining Lease to contain the initial cost of developing the mine. Otherwise the project would not have been developed.

3. The Mining Development Contract allowed fly-in fly-out mining operations at Porgera and the Memorandum of Agreement provided for the development of township at Paiam. Dispute resulted in a separate agreement for the development of Paiam town.

4. The mine has no legal obligation to develop a mine closure plan. There is no approved mine closure policy.

5. Lower Porgera people have running dispute with the Porgera mine on discharge of mine tailings.

6. Relocation of new generation landowners are not protected.

7. Small scale mining and illegal mining have not been clearly identified and separated.

These are just some of the problems for rushing projects like Porgera. We are just at the beginning of a long struggle by Porgera landowners.

Porgera landowners are respected deal makers and breakers. They were even the first to exit from MRDC Group of Companies.

Barrick Gold Limited may be leading gold producer but Porgera gold are on and in the land of Porgera landowners. Landowners will lead leaders to see Barrick as being here only for land, gold and money of Porgera people.

Would our leaders listen to Porgera landowners?

 

PNG is way ahead with Border Development Authority

By James Wanjik

E-mail: jameswanjik@hotmail.com

 

THE BORDER Development Authority (BDA) is a new special purpose development authority established under the BDA Act 2008. It was set up to coordinate funding and development in the border areas of PNG. Since independence on 16 September 1975 our borderless people have been neglected by the government.

Foreign policy is based on protection of state sovereignty. This was largely a function of regulation. It was about recognisance and preventative government intervention. Now after 33 years of independence the government saw the light at the end of the tunnel. Development of the border areas was a precondition to the protection of national sovereignty.

People-centred development will result in people being patriotic about their country. Education and training will naturally produce enlightened elites. Health care will give PNG healthy looking people. Transport infrastructure will create opportunities for beneficial employment. Supporting church-run programs will assist in forming spirit of morality and ethics. The BDA is about assisting the national government deliver on first national goal- integral human development.

Upon inauguration in March 2009 the BDA has won many firsts. It has won the support of the Autonomous Bougainville Government (ABG) to develop Kangu Border Post where regulators can process inflow and outflow of goods and people. This truth will be confirmed by the regulatory agencies.

BDA also used its special status as a development authority to get Asian Development Bank support for a pilot project on trade and investment in Wutung, Sandaun Province. The funding will be concessional.

BDA has also developed a ten year development plan from 2010 – 2020. It is a culmination of record consultation and collaboration with regulatory agencies, provincial governments and representatives of the ABG.

Before the end of this year BDA will take delivery of a number of landing crafts to assist the maritime transport needs of the islands, coastal, and river communities in the border areas and elsewhere in our country. More landing crafts will be acquired in 2010.

The BDA is perhaps the only service-oriented government organisation. It is a light the government created after 33 years of uncoordinated border development. Fear of light will destroy negative politics of old. Fiefdom syndrome is not what BDA is all about. It is about collaboration, cooperation and coordination. National sovereignty can only be protected in true unity of body, heart, mind and spirit. A whole person fully grounded in life knowledge and skills will protect PNG’s sovereignty. BDA is moving people to be patriotic about PNG. It will end the era of darkness in border development.

 

Monday, August 31, 2009

Impossible shelves

How many shelves do you see? Do you see 3 or 4?

Malaysian investment in Papua New Guinea continues to grow

Caption: Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare and Malaysian High Commissioner to PNG Datin Blanche Olbery prepare to cut a cake marking Malaysia’s 52nd anniversary of independence at the Holiday Inn in Port Moresby tonight.

Malaysian has and will continue to invest highly in Papua New Guinea, says Malaysian High Commissioner to PNG Datin Blanche Olbery.
Ms Olbery said this at a function at the Holiday Inn in Port Moresby tonight to celebrate Malaysia’s 52nd anniversary of independence.
“Malaysia’s investment in PNG is relatively high, as you can see by the number of prominent Malaysian businessmen present here today,” she told guests including Prime Minister Sir Michael Somare.
“The prospect of Malaysian investment in PNG remains positive as currently we have strong relations with PNG and our relations can be further enhanced for further investment to be facilitated into the resource sectors of the country.
“To date, the Malaysian private sector continues to have significant presence with investments totaling K3 billion since 1994.
“In addition, Malaysian companies are the leading citizen job providers in PNG owing to large number of jobs created per million kina invested and have in fact generated 36, 000 jobs since 1995.”
Ms Olbery predicted this investment would grow with the liquefied natural gas (LNG) project soon to come on stream.
“With the recent discovery of world’s biggest natural gas reservoir and the LNG project, which is expected to begin its operations soon as well as with political stability in the government, the economic interest in PNG will continue to grow and I believe in near future, there would be an influx of foreign investors and businessmen to invest in this country, including new investors from Malaysia,” she said.

Papua New Guinea tourism industry to be regulated over time

By IVAN POMALEU

Managing Director

Investment Promotion Authority

 

The issue of having foreign companies operating as tour operators in the country has been described as complex and “does not have a clear cut business operation”.

For beginners, tourism in Papua New Guinea was never recognised by the Government as a key economic sector until the development of the Government’s 2005- 2015 Medium Term Development Strategy (MTDS).

Being such, the Papua New Guinea Tourism Promotion Authority (PNGTPA), has been focusing its effort on marketing and promoting the destination than regulating the industry.

The PNGTPA in acknowledging the need to enforce industry standards has stated that though there are laws relating to foreigners doing business in PNG and the need to get foreign company certification, work permits and pay tax to the government, it is quite difficult to enforce them given that PNG’s tourism industry is at its infant stage and a lot of work needs to be done in terms of regulation and enforcement. 

 The Authority said that foreign tour operators visit the country on adhoc basis with varying number of days in PNG, furthermore complicates the monitoring of tour leaders or tour operators coming to PNG with their tourists.

The TPA has now taken a step in regulating the industry by developing the Tour Operators Code of Conduct for all operators in PNG and abroad.

This will be the building block to launch into regulating the industry.

This will mean that tour operators will be expected to comply with the necessary rules and regulations of the Government of PNG before doing business in PNG. 

The PNGTPA has pledged to work with other government agencies such as Investment Promotion Authority of Papua New Guinea (IPAPNG), the Internal Revenue Commission (IRC) and the Department of Labour and Immigration and the industry members both domestic and foreign to address the issue without causing any inconvenience for both the operators and the tourists within the short term.

Meanwhile, the Investment Promotion Act states that any one off or an isolated business transaction by a foreign company that is concluded within a period of less than 31 days does not require the company to be certified by IPA to carry on business in an activity in the country.

However, where the business is undertaken repeatedly over time, then that foreign company is deemed to be carrying on business in PNG and is required to be certified by IPA to operate in that business activity in the country.

Is this a rabbit or a duck?