Thursday, January 17, 2013

Whitehaven's new Papua New Guinea prop cleared to travel to UK

News & Star

Whitehaven's new Test prop Rodney Pora has finally been cleared to travel to the UK and should touch down at the Recre next month.
Rodney Pora
 
The Papua New Guinea international has passed a formal English test which was a pre-requisite for being granted a visa.
It’s great news for Haven, who had long-targeted a player they believe can make a big impact in the Championship this term.
“He wasn’t able to sit the English test until the beginning of December, despite the club, the Rugby Football League and UK Border Agency paperwork being in place since early October,” said Haven chief executive Barry Richardson.
“Rodney is now waiting for the issuing of his PNG visa which could take between three and four weeks. The club sees Rodney as a major signing and we want him here as soon as is practical.”
Prop was seen by many as one of Haven’s weaker positions last term, when they earned promotion to the second tier. And until Pora’s addition they had only three specialist front-rowers on the books – Paul Cullnean and Dave Houghton, two of their leading forwards in 2012, and ex-Super League star Paul Jackson, who was outstanding on his pre-season debut against Gateshead.
It is thought they will look to add another big forward to the squad. And with a partnership with top-flight giants St Helens in place, they will not be short of options.
Pora, who will join fellow PNG international Jessie Joe Parker at the Recre, looks likely to miss the league opener against visitors York on February 3 but fans should not have long to wait to see him in action.

In Port Moresby today

By MALUM NALU

Pictures of my wanderings around Port Moresby, not today, but on Tuesday, January 15, 2013, as my family and I were moving to up our new place at 8-Mile on the fringes of the city.
No more Hohola for us!


Atlas Street, Hohola 4, that Sir Mekere Morauta forgot about! Hope Michael Malabag can go one step further!


The recreation park at Hohola. Our children and youth deserve better!


Hohola afternoon


The recreation park at Hohola. Our children and youth deserve better!






Wards Road, Hohola


Waigani Drive




Gordon


Roadside market at Gordon


Gordon heading towards 5-Mile


Roadworks from 5-Mile to Erima are taking forever and a day!






Traffic chaos at Erima!






Bird of paradise, Erima


Heading out of the city towards 8-Mile!










Our residental area at 8-Mile








Sunset over Port Moresby as seen from 8-Mile




Heading nback into the city from 8-Mile




Sir John Guise Drive


Moasing fast asleep!


Goodnight babies!


The kids watching cartoons at our new place


My bedroom and study, complete with airconditioning

Leighton handed US$211 million contract to build Esso Highlands headquarters in PNG

Upstream

Australia’s Leighton Holdings has been awarded a contract by ExxonMobil’s Papua New Guinea subsidiary Esso Highlands.
Leighton’s wholly-owned subsidiary, Leighton Contractors, was awarded the A$200 million (US$211.3 million) contract to build Esso’s permanent head office in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
Leighton said construction was expected to start this year and will require a peak workforce of 360, adding 80% of those workers would be sourced from local industry.
Esso Highlands is the operator of the PNG liquefied natural gas project which is based on a two-train processing plant with a capacity of 6.9 milllion tonnes per annum.
Esso holds a 33.2% stake in the project and is partnered by Oil Search (29%), PNG government company Independent Public Business Corporation (16.6%), Santos (13.5%), Nippon Oil (4.7%), PNG landowner company Mineral Resources Development Company (2.8%) and national oil company Petromin (0.2%).

PNG surfing to take part in international project

By MALUM NALU

This is a picture of my good mate, PNG Surfing Association president Andrew Abel, riding a perfect wave off north coast Madang at Tupira where the SAPNG national Surfing Titles were held in 2011. 

He tells me he has been invited to contribute to a ground breaking world first book on sustainable surfing alongside side some big names and legends in the surfing world.
 "I have humbly accepted the invitation on behalf of SAPNG and my members and PNG, as it marks another significant milestone for SAPNG as we mark 26 years since foundation and in making our mark on the world surfing stage as an emerging surfing/ surf tourism nation, as a member of the International Surfing Association world governing body in California, USA," Abel says.
"This invitation complements the international award winning PNG surfing documentary Splinters that is making waves around the world and also the invitation to present a paper at the inaugural Global Surfing Network Conference on the Gold Coast in late February, 2013.
"From humble beginnings, we have come a long way and it feels good to be Papua New Guinean playing our part in contributing in a positive way working alongside some of the legends of the surfing world."

Papua New Guinea prepares for an Asian Century

East Asia Forum

Author: Sean Jacobs, Canberra

In late 2012 Papua New Guinea Prime Minister Peter O’Neill delivered a series of speeches that give clues to the country’s growth and political aspirations.
Peter O'Neill
For some time, observers of the country have been kept on a slim diet of academic analysis or fragmented news items for their understanding of the country and the intentions of its political leaders.
As PNG emerges from a politically disruptive past two years, O’Neill has been speaking out abroad. At the Bali Democracy Forum and the Lowy Institute for International Policy, O’Neill clarified his government’s objectives over its five-year term. Two broad priorities can be drawn from his remarks. First, O’Neill wants to increase the proportion of citizens who participate in and benefit from the resource economy. Second, the government wants to upgrade PNG’s national infrastructure and increase productivity.
Both goals depend considerably upon PNG’s economic relationship with Asia. PNG has vast stockpiles of copper, gold and nickel, and there is a steady roster of countries — China, Japan, Korea, Malaysia, the Philippines and Singapore — increasingly interested in purchasing and investing in its minerals. Supplemented by a lucrative future in Liquefied Natural Gas, the country’s GDP growth is currently at 9 per cent and is expected to almost double by 2016.
While it is easy to be euphoric about PNG’s trade and investment relationships in Asia, they will be geared toward shared interests and not values. PNG is a political outlier in Asia. It has a chaotic Westminster democracy, a political system only India, of Asian nations, is able to understand. This is important to note, especially at the cusp of a resources boom, because it will make it difficult for PNG to create meaningful ‘non-business’ alliances with its Asian trading partners. With that in mind, PNG should consider Lord Palmerston’s well-worn dictum that ‘nations have no permanent friends or allies, they have only permanent interests’ as it becomes more intertwined with Asia.
In order to sustain its resource commitment to Asia, PNG will need to build a decent national infrastructure. In O’Neill’s words: ‘You cannot grow an economy in a first-rate way with third-rate infrastructure’. PNG’s most recent budget commits $12 billion kina (US$5.8 billion), over five years, to upgrading the nation’s highways, roads and ports. To place this fiscal commitment in context, $12 billion kina is equal to PNG’s total national budget in one year.
But PNG’s infrastructure problems are not due to a historical lack of investment and overseas assistance. PNG’s 700km Highlands Highway, for example, which is a relic of PNG’s infrastructure failure, has received billions in funding and overseas aid with very limited results. Still, while rhetoric around large-scale public infrastructure in PNG should be treated with some caution, the renewed political focus on the sector is welcome, particularly in the context of a growing economic imperative from Asia.
On O’Neill’s radar, too, are government measures to improve productivity — an area on which he says that it ‘has never really focused’. PNG is not the only developing state with abundant natural resources, and the government is aware that it will have to supply its buyers more efficiently in the coming years to remain globally competitive. If the government listens more carefully to PNG’s business sector and implements their suggestions, which range in areas from law and order to skilled labour, it can realise productivity gains.
While O’Neill has given some clarity to the intentions of his government until the 2017 national election, a more enduring guide may lie in the production of a well thought-out and measured foreign policy document. Australia recently completed an Asian Century White Paper, and a PNG equivalent is at least worth discussing. PNG has used similar documents in the past — it issued the PNG Foreign Policy White Paper in 1982, for example. But the appetite for such papers seemed to have disappeared as the country lurched from one political crisis to the next.
PNG Vision 2050, published in late 2009, is the PNG government’s latest attempt to bring the nation’s goals together across a range of sectors. The very brief ‘international relations’ section outlined four objectives, including directing aid to national priorities, establishing Trade Commission Offices in relevant countries, increasing bilateral and multilateral relations in international forums, and ensuring the country’s foreign policy reflects the national interest. Should the government wish to pursue an Asian engagement strategy, these objectives may be a fair place to start.
Finally, O’Neill seems aware that PNG cannot live on extracting resources forever. In his Lowy Institute speech, for example, he stated that PNG had become ‘relaxed and comfortable’ and perhaps ‘complacent’ in exporting minerals and forestry. This raises valid questions for potential growth sectors outside of resources such as agriculture and perhaps tourism. These sectors also depend on infrastructure and productivity, so O’Neill’s two priorities could broaden PNG’s economy. While a gap between rhetoric and results is common in PNG politics, many of the country’s citizens, and at least parts of Asia, will be watching PNG’s government more closely than ever.

Sean Jacobs is a former Australian youth volunteer in the Pacific and has worked with all levels of government in Papua New Guinea.

Wednesday, January 16, 2013

Coffee officers complete training



Eleven technical coffee officers recently completed week-long induction training on how to serve members of the Apo, Kange and Angra (AAK) Coffee Cooperatives based in the highlands provinces.
The 11 technical coffee officers and executives of AAK Cooperatives after completing their induction programme in Goroka recently.-Picture courtesy of CIC

The AAK is a major coffee farmer cooperative group deriving its coffee farmer membership from Chimbu, Jiwaka, Western and Eastern Highlands provinces.
The cooperatives engaged the officers to implement a K500, 000 coffee project successfully sourced from the World Bank-funded coffee component of the Productive Partnership in Agriculture Project (PPAP) late last year. 
Cooperatives coordinator, Brian Kuglame, said the officers were selected from the respective cluster groups of each cooperative from the provinces and were trained to promote coffee quality and sustainable production and marketing.
“Today, the cargo cult perception is growing very big in many communities and these local officers will be there to fight these perceptions and urge the people to work the land to survive,” Kuglame said.
He said one officer would cover more than two districts in each province, including Jiwaka.

Goroka farmers reaps what he sows


By MALUM NALU

Goroka farmer Tom Solepa, who yesterday completed selling 156 bags of kaukau (sweet potatoes) at Gordon Market in Port Moresby for K150 each, has urged the people of Papua New Guinea to go back to the land.
Solepa, a graduate economist who gave up a well-paying government job some years ago to return to the land, will use the more than K7, 000 he had earned in just two days to pay school fees for his two children who are attending Goroka International Primary School.
Tom Soles

He told The National yesterday after selling his kaukau that he was very proud, as an executive of Highlands Farmers and Settlers Association (HFSA), to have brought his kaukau all the way from Goroka via Lae to Port Moresby.
“It takes courage, patience, to bring our kaukau to market,” Solepa said.
“As a person who has been trying to promote farmer issues, this gives me a lot of satisfaction.
“I want to tell our people that money is on the land.
“The returns are very good.”
Solepa, 38, from Meteyufa village outside Goroka in the Asaro Valley, said kaukau was a “winner”.
“I see the kaukau trade as a big business,” he said.
“You bring in kaukau from rural areas to urban areas.
“In Goroka, we do sell the kaukau we grow, however, we feel that we can make better money if we sell in Lae or Port Moresby.
Kaukau being sold at Lae Main Market
“We stopped growing coffee a long time ago.
“It takes us just three months to for kaukau, from growing to harvesting.
“In a year, we make four harvests.
“If we sell 60 bags, we can make up to K11, 000.”
The process, however, can be expensive, as Solepa has had to pay people to tend his gardens, harvest, bag the kaukau and carry them to roadside, road transport to Lae, sea transport to Port Moresby, and several others.
He has also had to pay for his airfares to and from Goroka.
But true to form, Solepa has reaped what he sowed, and what he had earned from this latest kaukau sale will go towards the education of his two children at international school in Goroka.
“My kids are at international school so this money is for their school fees,” he said.
“I pay K5, 000 per child per term, so this money will help me a lot.”