Friday, March 01, 2013

Answering the call of God in PNG


This article was first published in The National Weekender on Friday, March 1, 2013

By MALUM NALU

A few months ago in the USA, Reverend Stephen Michael Leach was desperately seeking to return to Papua New Guinea but didn’t have the money to buy airfares here.
Leach, for that that came in late, is a well-known, young, red-headed preacher from Washington DC, USA, who gave up a good life there seven years ago to answer God’s calling in PNG.
Reverend Stephen Michael Leach with children in the Markham Valley, Morobe province, 2010

He is a household name in Lae, which he passionately calls “home”, but has also carried out his ministry in other parts of the country, and on the social media.
Leach is the president of Sojourner Missions & Humanitarian Outreach,  an interdenominational ministry, focused on edifying and equipping the established church, addressing various societal and human rights concerns from a biblical perspective, and reaching the nations with the gospel of Jesus Christ.
 Leach with two children on Nusa Island, New Ireland province, in 2008.
Over a cup of coffee last Sunday, we talk about many things including why he gave up a “good life”, the church in PNG, witchcraft, violence against women, et al, however, there is something that haunts Leach to this day.
He tells me, with tears in his eyes, of an incident in Lae some years ago in which a young woman killed herself – over the shame of carrying the child of a married man, and being rejected by the established ‘church’ – which has brought him back to this country.
 Leach baptising at Busu River, Lae, 2006.
At that time, Leach knew a lovely girl who was vibrant, intelligent, educated and well on her way to becoming a successful career woman.
“Occasionally she would come sit in the studio audience with her friends while I was on air at FM Morobe and I'd see her every day on lunch break on the steps of Vela Rumana,” he says.
At Christian Life Centre, Speedway in Lae, 2008.
“ She began a relationship with a older married man and I watched as her life began to fall apart... everyone talked about her... whenever I would greet her in Food Mart I could feel the ever-present watchful eyes of suspicion and judgment from the elders.
“One lapun lotu mama pulled me aside one day after witnessing me greeting the girl and gave me a tongue lashing about how inappropriate it was for a young single reverend with my skin color and position to be seen publicly talking to someone she considered a glorified K2 meri (prostitute).
A friend to all.
“I listened to that mama out of fear of offending the lapun Lotu lain and destroying my reputation.
“I stopped going out of my way to greet this girl... I was no longer openly friendly in public lest someone accuse me of flirting with her.
“A few months later I was catching a PMV from Madang to Lae and as we went around Madang town and I hung my head out of window yelling, ‘Lae! Lae! Lae!" like a legit boss crew, I saw this girl walking towards the bus from the market carrying her bags.
“I thought to myself, ‘oh no..., she saw me and smiled and for a moment I saw the girl she used to be.
“She sat beside me all day on the bumpy and dust filled ride back to swit rainy Lae.
“We talked some and she tried to engage me in conversation, but I was so fearful of what other people on the bus would think about us that I engaged her politely, but I never really talked about anything in depth.
“We dropped her off at the hostel in Lae and I said, ‘lukim yu bihain wantok’ as she walked away.
“A few days later I heard that she had discovered that she was pregnant with the child of that married man and that she had hung herself in her bedroom.
“I mourned her death and the death of her child,
“I cried out to God and begged Him to forgive me for bowing to the pressure of religion and culture and shunning her for the sake of my own reputation.
“I begged God to forgive me for wasting an entire day sitting next to her on the bus from Madang when I could have been speaking life over her spirit.
“It was and is one of the most shameful moments of my ministry.... but I share it with you today because I do not want you to make the same mistake that I did all those years ago.
“God had sent me 10,000 miles across the world to her nation.
“He had placed me in her life; He had made a white boy from Virginia a honorary boss crew on a Madang PMV so that He could place me right next to her while she was walking through the valley of the shadow of death.
“And I had bowed down to the religious spirits and the whispering tongues of gossips and in so doing I had betrayed my calling as a missionary.
“For years I carried that all-consuming guilt and felt that the blood of her and her unborn child was on my ‘holy’ hands.
“When she died I changed.
“I ceased caring what any of the judgmental religious people thought about me.
“I was going to reach and be friends with everyone regardless of who they were.” 
A friend to all.
Leach was in an antique store in Virginia last year where he had been selling items to raise money for his return tickets to PNG and the owner stopped him and said, "Oh wait Stephen I brought you something from home!" and handed him a well-worn 1975 Kina coin from PNG saying, "Thirty years ago I was working in doctor’s office and my boss brought this for me from PNG... I think it's only fitting that it returns back where it came from with you!"
“To her it was just a coin from a strange nation but to me it was a rainbow painted in the sky!” Leach recalls.
Reverend Stephen Michael Leach
“I almost never dream, but the next night I dreamt of the rich red soil of the Highlands, row-after-row of coffee and tea, my first home in the village made out of grass with woven bamboo walls, and a dirt floor.
“I tasted yellow kaukau cooked in the fire and kumu seasoned with ginger and coconut and I saw dozens of children running alongside the PMV yelling, ‘White mahn! White mahn!’ and I stuck my head out the window and screamed back, ‘Em stap we?! Mi no lukim em!’
“I never dream, but that night I dreamed.
“A few days later, vessels of the Lord here in Papua New Guinea wired US$2,000 into our ministry account to help me with airfare.
“It was a seed offering from PNG for PNG.
“I wept, I danced, I shouted, I lost my English and my Tok Pisin.
“It wasn't the money I danced over, it was the fact that it came from Papua New Guinea and was anointed for the purpose of reuniting my body and my spirit with my beloved land of a thousand tribes.”  

The high-stakes world of Papua New Guinea mining

By Ian Bickis, special to The Northern Miner

PORT MORESBY, PAPUA NEW GUINEA — Rising out of the sea at the collision of the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates, Papua New Guinea is the stuff of legend for both its geological potential and punishing working environment.

For miners and explorers, PNG has long presented a tough trade-off between the two, requiring major commitments to access the rich deposits.

In the early 1930s the rugged island was the site of the world’s first major air-supported mining project, when Canadian miner Placer Development used modified Junkers planes to fly in dredge equipment to its Bulolo gold project. With individual payloads of less than 3 tonnes, the Junkers hauled in almost 36,000 tonnes of gear. The determination paid off, with the company pulling out some 1.3 million oz. gold from the river over the next 10 years.

Fast-forward to today and logistics is still one of the biggest barriers to operating in PNG. The whole country has about 3,000 km of paved roads, plus roughly 6,000 km of dirt ones in varying states of repair. (Compare that to Sweden, which has 573,000 km of roads squeezed into the same-sized country.)

The PNG government is aware of the barrier, with Prime Minister Peter O’Neill committing to improve the transportation network in a speech to Australia’s National Press Club last year.

“One of our greatest needs is to repair, upgrade and most certainly expand our economically vital infrastructure,” O’Neill said.

But the lure of riches has been a strong motivator for miners to overcome such challenges independently and develop some of the world’s biggest deposits. These include epithermal deposits like Newcrest Mining’s (NM-T, NMC-A) Lihir mine, which has already produced 9 million oz. gold and still has 33 million in reserves, and Barrick Gold’s (ABX-T, ABX-N) Porgera mine, which has produced over 17 million oz. gold and has over 6 million oz. in reserves.

The copper-gold porphyry systems are equally impressive, with the Wafi-Golpu joint venture between Newcrest and Harmony Gold (HMY-N) sitting on 28.5 million oz. gold and 20 billion lb. copper; Xstrata’s (XTA-L) Frieda River project hosting 14.8 million oz. gold and 20.7 billion lb. copper; and the Ok Tedi mine, now owned by the PNG government, already producing over 11 million oz. gold and 27 billion lb. copper since 1984, with years of mine life left.

Numbers like these put PNG as the third most geologically prospective place on earth in the Fraser Institute’s 2012 annual mining survey, at least when setting aside regulations and land-use policies.

The huge, untapped potential is what drew Marengo Mining (MRN-T, MGO-A) to the country in 2005.

“It was really just born out of looking for an opportunity for a junior company to do something quite exciting and have a project of significant value,” Dean Richardson, Marengo’s investor relations representative, said by phone.

In a few years the company has turned its Yandera copper-gold-moly project into a 4 billion lb. copper resource, with 486 million measured-and-indicated tonnes grading 0.37% copper. Marengo plans to release a feasibility study on the well-advanced project in March, with a development capital expenditure of around US$1.8 billion and anticipated annual production of 200 million lb. copper.

“We’re talking about a project somewhere around 30 million tonnes per annum. It really is a project that a number of medium- to large-size companies would be happy to get their hands on,” Richardson says.

Marengo has several years on PNG Gold (PGK-V), which only started exploring in the country in 2011. But already PNG Gold has pulled some intriguing gold hits, and it plans to have a resource out later this year. Results from the company’s Imwauna project, sitting on an island just off the southern tip of PNG’s mainland, include 6 metres grading 111.97 grams gold per tonne, 4 metres of 49.86 grams gold and 6 metres of 36.16 grams gold.

The company found it rough-going at the start with slower-than-expected drilling, but it is now managing 4,000 metres a month with four of its own rigs, and is well on its way to a resource.

“We had some real teething pains at the beginning,” PNG Gold president Neil Halldorson says. He adds that the company has had to carry a lot more spare parts and be careful about planning heavy equipment moves, as poor planning with either can set a project back. “Over time we’ve learned to work with those issues, and with every month we get better at it,” he says.

But Halldorson embraces the challenge, because it keeps a lot of competing juniors away and gives any company that can overcome these challenges a real advantage.

“There are very, very few juniors in Papua New Guinea, and a good deal of that has to do with cost and logistics, and everything else. So it really does act as a barrier,” Halldorson says.

Explorers WCB Resources (WCB-V) and Vangold Resources (VAN-V) have also made an entrance, with active exploration programs in the country.

But some haven’t fared so well with the high costs, with New Guinea Gold (NGG-V) shuttering its small Sinivit gold mine last year after it ran out of money. The company is trying to get itself going again, but with its shares trading at a penny, raising money isn’t easy. Papuan Precious Metals (PAU-V), hovering around 2¢, has also struggled in the country.

Size helps when developing projects in PNG: Newcrest and Harmony are running the Hidden Valley gold-silver mine despite a few operational issues; Metallurgical Corp. of China opened its Ramu nickel-cobalt mine last year despite years of environmental delays; and Newcrest is finishing up a US$1.3-billion expansion of its Lihir mine to expand designed output to a million oz. a year after spending A$9.5 billion buying the mine in 2009.

These projects, plus Exxon Mobil’s (XOM-N) US$19-billion natural gas project, have helped keep PNG’s economic growth rate at close to 8% for the past decade.

And while growth has been strong in recent years, the country could see much more investment, thanks to sizeable projects in the pipeline. Australian bank ANZ released a study estimating that PNG’s natural resource sector, including mining, oil and gas, could quadruple by 2030, with some US$25 billion in annual export revenues, or as much as US$38 billion, using more optimistic assumptions. Achieving such an increase in output would require US$130 billion in capital investment.

But those estimates rest on projects going forward, even as several major miners have signalled plans to exit PNG, as companies worldwide look to contain costs and focus on core assets.

In mid-2012, Xstrata signalled its intention to offload its Frieda River project, while a feasibility study on the project at the end of last year added US$300 million to project capex, which totalled US$5.6 billion. In 2011, Inmet Mining (IMN-T) bowed out of PNG after selling off its 18% interest in Ok Tedi Mining for US$355 million.

On a smaller scale, Newmont Mining (NMC-T, NEM-N) told its junior partner Triple Plate Junction (TPJ-L) that it would end its search for big porphyry systems at Morobe after spending US$15 million to earn 75% of the project. And Barrick informed joint-venture partner Coppermoly in mid-2012 that it was looking to sell its 72% stake in three tenements after spending US$22 million to earn-in on the properties.

And some smaller skirmishes with companies may make others wary of PNG. Last year Aldridge Minerals (AGM-V) pulled out of PNG after the government declined to renew the junior’s Kili Teke copper-gold licence. And more publicly, Nautilus Minerals (NUS-T) has been stymied in its efforts to advance the world’s first major deep-sea mining project after getting embroiled in licensing and financial disagreements with the government. The company suspended construction of the $450-million project late last year.

While cost and operational risks worry some, mining analyst Cathy Moises of Evans and Partners, who tracks several operators in the country, said by phone that “as long as you do your groundwork in PNG, you’ve got the locals on side, and have done things the right way — then it’s actually a very good place to work.”

Good relations with locals are important in PNG, as landowners control 97% of the country, and there are no large tracts of government land.

Companies big and small have had trouble with landowners, with Barrick’s Porgera, Newcrest’s Lihir mine and New Guinea Gold’s ailing Sinivit mine all shut down by locals last year.

But Moises downplays the problems with landowners.

“It’s not a major issue. If the mine is shut down it’s usually short in duration, and minor,” she says. “PNG tends to be fairly stable.”

Moises still likes what she sees in PNG, even if it’s a country that doesn’t give up its deposits easily.

“I still think there are some big projects to be found. The terrain and working over there is difficult, so it certainly hasn’t had the attention of some other countries where it’s nice and flat, and you’re much closer to civilization.”

The high-stakes world of Papua New Guinea mining

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By: Ian Bickis, special to The Northern Miner 2013-02-27
PORT MORESBY, PAPUA NEW GUINEA — Rising out of the sea at the collision of the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates, Papua New Guinea is the stuff of legend for both its geological potential and punishing working environment.
For miners and explorers, PNG has long presented a tough trade-off between the two, requiring major commitments to access the rich deposits.
In the early 1930s the rugged island was the site of the world’s first major air-supported mining project, when Canadian miner Placer Development used modified Junkers planes to fly in dredge equipment to its Bulolo gold project. With individual payloads of less than 3 tonnes, the Junkers hauled in almost 36,000 tonnes of gear. The determination paid off, with the company pulling out some 1.3 million oz. gold from the river over the next 10 years.
Fast-forward to today and logistics is still one of the biggest barriers to operating in PNG. The whole country has about 3,000 km of paved roads, plus roughly 6,000 km of dirt ones in varying states of repair. (Compare that to Sweden, which has 573,000 km of roads squeezed into the same-sized country.)
The PNG government is aware of the barrier, with Prime Minister Peter O’Neill committing to improve the transportation network in a speech to Australia’s National Press Club last year.
“One of our greatest needs is to repair, upgrade and most certainly expand our economically vital infrastructure,” O’Neill said.
But the lure of riches has been a strong motivator for miners to overcome such challenges independently and develop some of the world’s biggest deposits. These include epithermal deposits like Newcrest Mining’s (NM-T, NMC-A) Lihir mine, which has already produced 9 million oz. gold and still has 33 million in reserves, and Barrick Gold’s (ABX-T, ABX-N) Porgera mine, which has produced over 17 million oz. gold and has over 6 million oz. in reserves.
The copper-gold porphyry systems are equally impressive, with the Wafi-Golpu joint venture between Newcrest and Harmony Gold (HMY-N) sitting on 28.5 million oz. gold and 20 billion lb. copper; Xstrata’s (XTA-L) Frieda River project hosting 14.8 million oz. gold and 20.7 billion lb. copper; and the Ok Tedi mine, now owned by the PNG government, already producing over 11 million oz. gold and 27 billion lb. copper since 1984, with years of mine life left.
Numbers like these put PNG as the third most geologically prospective place on earth in the Fraser Institute’s 2012 annual mining survey, at least when setting aside regulations and land-use policies.
The huge, untapped potential is what drew Marengo Mining (MRN-T, MGO-A) to the country in 2005.
“It was really just born out of looking for an opportunity for a junior company to do something quite exciting and have a project of significant value,” Dean Richardson, Marengo’s investor relations representative, said by phone.
In a few years the company has turned its Yandera copper-gold-moly project into a 4 billion lb. copper resource, with 486 million measured-and-indicated tonnes grading 0.37% copper. Marengo plans to release a feasibility study on the well-advanced project in March, with a development capital expenditure of around US$1.8 billion and anticipated annual production of 200 million lb. copper.
“We’re talking about a project somewhere around 30 million tonnes per annum. It really is a project that a number of medium- to large-size companies would be happy to get their hands on,” Richardson says.
Marengo has several years on PNG Gold (PGK-V), which only started exploring in the country in 2011. But already PNG Gold has pulled some intriguing gold hits, and it plans to have a resource out later this year. Results from the company’s Imwauna project, sitting on an island just off the southern tip of PNG’s mainland, include 6 metres grading 111.97 grams gold per tonne, 4 metres of 49.86 grams gold and 6 metres of 36.16 grams gold.
The company found it rough-going at the start with slower-than-expected drilling, but it is now managing 4,000 metres a month with four of its own rigs, and is well on its way to a resource.
“We had some real teething pains at the beginning,” PNG Gold president Neil Halldorson says. He adds that the company has had to carry a lot more spare parts and be careful about planning heavy equipment moves, as poor planning with either can set a project back. “Over time we’ve learned to work with those issues, and with every month we get better at it,” he says.
But Halldorson embraces the challenge, because it keeps a lot of competing juniors away and gives any company that can overcome these challenges a real advantage.
“There are very, very few juniors in Papua New Guinea, and a good deal of that has to do with cost and logistics, and everything else. So it really does act as a barrier,” Halldorson says.
Explorers WCB Resources (WCB-V) and Vangold Resources (VAN-V) have also made an entrance, with active exploration programs in the country.
But some haven’t fared so well with the high costs, with New Guinea Gold (NGG-V) shuttering its small Sinivit gold mine last year after it ran out of money. The company is trying to get itself going again, but with its shares trading at a penny, raising money isn’t easy. Papuan Precious Metals (PAU-V), hovering around 2¢, has also struggled in the country.
Size helps when developing projects in PNG: Newcrest and Harmony are running the Hidden Valley gold-silver mine despite a few operational issues; Metallurgical Corp. of China opened its Ramu nickel-cobalt mine last year despite years of environmental delays; and Newcrest is finishing up a US$1.3-billion expansion of its Lihir mine to expand designed output to a million oz. a year after spending A$9.5 billion buying the mine in 2009.
These projects, plus Exxon Mobil’s (XOM-N) US$19-billion natural gas project, have helped keep PNG’s economic growth rate at close to 8% for the past decade.
And while growth has been strong in recent years, the country could see much more investment, thanks to sizeable projects in the pipeline. Australian bank ANZ released a study estimating that PNG’s natural resource sector, including mining, oil and gas, could quadruple by 2030, with some US$25 billion in annual export revenues, or as much as US$38 billion, using more optimistic assumptions. Achieving such an increase in output would require US$130 billion in capital investment.
But those estimates rest on projects going forward, even as several major miners have signalled plans to exit PNG, as companies worldwide look to contain costs and focus on core assets.
In mid-2012, Xstrata signalled its intention to offload its Frieda River project, while a feasibility study on the project at the end of last year added US$300 million to project capex, which totalled US$5.6 billion. In 2011, Inmet Mining (IMN-T) bowed out of PNG after selling off its 18% interest in Ok Tedi Mining for US$355 million.
On a smaller scale, Newmont Mining (NMC-T, NEM-N) told its junior partner Triple Plate Junction (TPJ-L) that it would end its search for big porphyry systems at Morobe after spending US$15 million to earn 75% of the project. And Barrick informed joint-venture partner Coppermoly in mid-2012 that it was looking to sell its 72% stake in three tenements after spending US$22 million to earn-in on the properties.
And some smaller skirmishes with companies may make others wary of PNG. Last year Aldridge Minerals (AGM-V) pulled out of PNG after the government declined to renew the junior’s Kili Teke copper-gold licence. And more publicly, Nautilus Minerals (NUS-T) has been stymied in its efforts to advance the world’s first major deep-sea mining project after getting embroiled in licensing and financial disagreements with the government. The company suspended construction of the $450-million project late last year.
While cost and operational risks worry some, mining analyst Cathy Moises of Evans and Partners, who tracks several operators in the country, said by phone that “as long as you do your groundwork in PNG, you’ve got the locals on side, and have done things the right way — then it’s actually a very good place to work.”
Good relations with locals are important in PNG, as landowners control 97% of the country, and there are no large tracts of government land.
Companies big and small have had trouble with landowners, with Barrick’s Porgera, Newcrest’s Lihir mine and New Guinea Gold’s ailing Sinivit mine all shut down by locals last year.
But Moises downplays the problems with landowners.
“It’s not a major issue. If the mine is shut down it’s usually short in duration, and minor,” she says. “PNG tends to be fairly stable.”
Moises still likes what she sees in PNG, even if it’s a country that doesn’t give up its deposits easily.
“I still think there are some big projects to be found. The terrain and working over there is difficult, so it certainly hasn’t had the attention of some other countries where it’s nice and flat, and you’re much closer to civilization.”
- See more at: http://www.northernminer.com/news/the-high-stakes-world-of-papua-new-guinea-mining/1002105689/?type=HotSectors#sthash.LcLd251i.dpuf

The high-stakes world of Papua New Guinea mining

Site Visit

TEXT SIZE bigger text smaller text
By: Ian Bickis, special to The Northern Miner 2013-02-27
PORT MORESBY, PAPUA NEW GUINEA — Rising out of the sea at the collision of the Pacific and Indo-Australian tectonic plates, Papua New Guinea is the stuff of legend for both its geological potential and punishing working environment.
For miners and explorers, PNG has long presented a tough trade-off between the two, requiring major commitments to access the rich deposits.
In the early 1930s the rugged island was the site of the world’s first major air-supported mining project, when Canadian miner Placer Development used modified Junkers planes to fly in dredge equipment to its Bulolo gold project. With individual payloads of less than 3 tonnes, the Junkers hauled in almost 36,000 tonnes of gear. The determination paid off, with the company pulling out some 1.3 million oz. gold from the river over the next 10 years.
Fast-forward to today and logistics is still one of the biggest barriers to operating in PNG. The whole country has about 3,000 km of paved roads, plus roughly 6,000 km of dirt ones in varying states of repair. (Compare that to Sweden, which has 573,000 km of roads squeezed into the same-sized country.)
The PNG government is aware of the barrier, with Prime Minister Peter O’Neill committing to improve the transportation network in a speech to Australia’s National Press Club last year.
“One of our greatest needs is to repair, upgrade and most certainly expand our economically vital infrastructure,” O’Neill said.
But the lure of riches has been a strong motivator for miners to overcome such challenges independently and develop some of the world’s biggest deposits. These include epithermal deposits like Newcrest Mining’s (NM-T, NMC-A) Lihir mine, which has already produced 9 million oz. gold and still has 33 million in reserves, and Barrick Gold’s (ABX-T, ABX-N) Porgera mine, which has produced over 17 million oz. gold and has over 6 million oz. in reserves.
The copper-gold porphyry systems are equally impressive, with the Wafi-Golpu joint venture between Newcrest and Harmony Gold (HMY-N) sitting on 28.5 million oz. gold and 20 billion lb. copper; Xstrata’s (XTA-L) Frieda River project hosting 14.8 million oz. gold and 20.7 billion lb. copper; and the Ok Tedi mine, now owned by the PNG government, already producing over 11 million oz. gold and 27 billion lb. copper since 1984, with years of mine life left.
Numbers like these put PNG as the third most geologically prospective place on earth in the Fraser Institute’s 2012 annual mining survey, at least when setting aside regulations and land-use policies.
The huge, untapped potential is what drew Marengo Mining (MRN-T, MGO-A) to the country in 2005.
“It was really just born out of looking for an opportunity for a junior company to do something quite exciting and have a project of significant value,” Dean Richardson, Marengo’s investor relations representative, said by phone.
In a few years the company has turned its Yandera copper-gold-moly project into a 4 billion lb. copper resource, with 486 million measured-and-indicated tonnes grading 0.37% copper. Marengo plans to release a feasibility study on the well-advanced project in March, with a development capital expenditure of around US$1.8 billion and anticipated annual production of 200 million lb. copper.
“We’re talking about a project somewhere around 30 million tonnes per annum. It really is a project that a number of medium- to large-size companies would be happy to get their hands on,” Richardson says.
Marengo has several years on PNG Gold (PGK-V), which only started exploring in the country in 2011. But already PNG Gold has pulled some intriguing gold hits, and it plans to have a resource out later this year. Results from the company’s Imwauna project, sitting on an island just off the southern tip of PNG’s mainland, include 6 metres grading 111.97 grams gold per tonne, 4 metres of 49.86 grams gold and 6 metres of 36.16 grams gold.
The company found it rough-going at the start with slower-than-expected drilling, but it is now managing 4,000 metres a month with four of its own rigs, and is well on its way to a resource.
“We had some real teething pains at the beginning,” PNG Gold president Neil Halldorson says. He adds that the company has had to carry a lot more spare parts and be careful about planning heavy equipment moves, as poor planning with either can set a project back. “Over time we’ve learned to work with those issues, and with every month we get better at it,” he says.
But Halldorson embraces the challenge, because it keeps a lot of competing juniors away and gives any company that can overcome these challenges a real advantage.
“There are very, very few juniors in Papua New Guinea, and a good deal of that has to do with cost and logistics, and everything else. So it really does act as a barrier,” Halldorson says.
Explorers WCB Resources (WCB-V) and Vangold Resources (VAN-V) have also made an entrance, with active exploration programs in the country.
But some haven’t fared so well with the high costs, with New Guinea Gold (NGG-V) shuttering its small Sinivit gold mine last year after it ran out of money. The company is trying to get itself going again, but with its shares trading at a penny, raising money isn’t easy. Papuan Precious Metals (PAU-V), hovering around 2¢, has also struggled in the country.
Size helps when developing projects in PNG: Newcrest and Harmony are running the Hidden Valley gold-silver mine despite a few operational issues; Metallurgical Corp. of China opened its Ramu nickel-cobalt mine last year despite years of environmental delays; and Newcrest is finishing up a US$1.3-billion expansion of its Lihir mine to expand designed output to a million oz. a year after spending A$9.5 billion buying the mine in 2009.
These projects, plus Exxon Mobil’s (XOM-N) US$19-billion natural gas project, have helped keep PNG’s economic growth rate at close to 8% for the past decade.
And while growth has been strong in recent years, the country could see much more investment, thanks to sizeable projects in the pipeline. Australian bank ANZ released a study estimating that PNG’s natural resource sector, including mining, oil and gas, could quadruple by 2030, with some US$25 billion in annual export revenues, or as much as US$38 billion, using more optimistic assumptions. Achieving such an increase in output would require US$130 billion in capital investment.
But those estimates rest on projects going forward, even as several major miners have signalled plans to exit PNG, as companies worldwide look to contain costs and focus on core assets.
In mid-2012, Xstrata signalled its intention to offload its Frieda River project, while a feasibility study on the project at the end of last year added US$300 million to project capex, which totalled US$5.6 billion. In 2011, Inmet Mining (IMN-T) bowed out of PNG after selling off its 18% interest in Ok Tedi Mining for US$355 million.
On a smaller scale, Newmont Mining (NMC-T, NEM-N) told its junior partner Triple Plate Junction (TPJ-L) that it would end its search for big porphyry systems at Morobe after spending US$15 million to earn 75% of the project. And Barrick informed joint-venture partner Coppermoly in mid-2012 that it was looking to sell its 72% stake in three tenements after spending US$22 million to earn-in on the properties.
And some smaller skirmishes with companies may make others wary of PNG. Last year Aldridge Minerals (AGM-V) pulled out of PNG after the government declined to renew the junior’s Kili Teke copper-gold licence. And more publicly, Nautilus Minerals (NUS-T) has been stymied in its efforts to advance the world’s first major deep-sea mining project after getting embroiled in licensing and financial disagreements with the government. The company suspended construction of the $450-million project late last year.
While cost and operational risks worry some, mining analyst Cathy Moises of Evans and Partners, who tracks several operators in the country, said by phone that “as long as you do your groundwork in PNG, you’ve got the locals on side, and have done things the right way — then it’s actually a very good place to work.”
Good relations with locals are important in PNG, as landowners control 97% of the country, and there are no large tracts of government land.
Companies big and small have had trouble with landowners, with Barrick’s Porgera, Newcrest’s Lihir mine and New Guinea Gold’s ailing Sinivit mine all shut down by locals last year.
But Moises downplays the problems with landowners.
“It’s not a major issue. If the mine is shut down it’s usually short in duration, and minor,” she says. “PNG tends to be fairly stable.”
Moises still likes what she sees in PNG, even if it’s a country that doesn’t give up its deposits easily.
“I still think there are some big projects to be found. The terrain and working over there is difficult, so it certainly hasn’t had the attention of some other countries where it’s nice and flat, and you’re much closer to civilization.”
- See more at: http://www.northernminer.com/news/the-high-stakes-world-of-papua-new-guinea-mining/1002105689/?type=HotSectors#sthash.LcLd251i.dpuf

Thursday, February 28, 2013

Papua New Guinea’s fisheries boom

By BUSINESS ADVANTAGE PNG
PORT MORESBY, PNG ----- The northern coast of Papua New Guinea is experiencing a boom in investment from international companies looking to process fish onshore. Samantha Magick examines why.
Around 18% of the world’s total tuna stock is found in PNG’s 2.5 million square kilometre Exclusive Economic Zone (EEZ). The fishing industry has grown from a dependency on access fees in the early 1980s to a more diversified sector, with significant downstream processing today.
Annually, about three-quarters of a million tonnes of tuna is caught in PNG waters. Most of these are landed in other countries for further processing. The Pacific Tuna Forum estimates the raw value of PNG’s annual catch at about US$1.5 billion per annum and says this figure could more than double if more value-added activities were implemented. Indeed, PNG has a long-term goal of processing in-country 100% of the tuna catch from within its EEZ.
Room for expansion
Much of the growth in the fisheries sector is taking place near Lae, where four new plants are planned for Malahang, with broad support from the provincial government and landowners.
Among them is Majestic Seafood, a joint-venture between Frabelle Fishing Corporation of the Philippines, Philippine-based Century Canning Corporation, and Thailand’s Thai Union Corporation (a subsidiary of Thai Union Frozen Products—the largest tuna canner in the world). Majestic Seafood’s K80 million (US$38 million) tuna canning plant, scheduled to commence operations in June 2013, is expected to create as many as 5000 local jobs when in full production.
Others planning tuna loining plants in Lae include the South Korean company Dong Wong, Nambawan Seafoods and Haili Sheng from mainland China. Two other operators, Malaysia’s International Food Corporation and Frabelle already have canneries in Lae.
Meanwhile, Managing Director Pete Celso says R D Tuna—currently PNG’s largest canner—is about to begin construction of another cannery in Madang, which will double its production and employ 3000 people. The cannery is expected to be operational in early 2014.
Why PNG, why now?
The surge in investment is motivated in part by the advantages of bringing the canning process closer to the Pacific’s fishing grounds.
R D Tuna’s Pete Celso says PNG’s duty-free access to the European Union (EU) has also been a plus. Under its Economic Partnership Agreement with the EU, ratified in 2011, PNG can not only enter the European market duty-free but it has also been permitted to export processed fish to the EU from any vessel fishing outside its territorial waters, thus exempting PNG from the usual Rules of Origin compliance, provided the fish is processed in PNG.
Germany, the United Kingdom and the Netherlands are PNG’s main European markets for canned tuna. Loin exports to Spain and Italy are also significant, and increasing.
The increased emphasis on the fisheries industry also reflects national government priorities. The country’s Vision 2050 strategy makes frequent reference to the fisheries sector as an area of the economy requiring more development if PNG is to diversify beyond its oil and gas revenue base. The EU estimates that by 2016 some 53,000 jobs will be created in the PNG tuna industry if planned projects go ahead.
Madang Industrial Centre
The proposed Pacific Marine Industrial Zone (PMIZ) has been the flagship project of PNG’s fisheries industry for several years. Planned for a 215-hectare site 30 km north of Madang, it is designed to create greater economies of scale and greater efficiency for fish processing factories, port facilities, power generation and waste water processing. A Chinese contractor has already been selected for the construction work—the state-owned enterprise, Shenyang International Economic and Technical Cooperation Company.
In recent months, the PMIZ it has undergone a name change and a shift in focus. It is now known as the Madang Industrial Centre and activities will be broadened beyond fisheries, according to National Fisheries Authority (NFA) Director Sylvester Pokajam.
Niugini Tuna Limited—a partnership between the R D Corporation of the Philippines, Fairwell Fishery Group of Taiwan, and Tri Marine International of the US—plans to operate at the zone, while the PNG Government recently held discussions with the French Sapmer-Piriou joint venture, which is considering a fisheries wharf, tuna processing plant, dry dock and shipyard in the zone.
The zone is being funded by a loan of US$72 million from China Exim Bank—a matter of contention amongst some landowners which is now being challenged in the courts. Political support for the project remains strong, however, with Madang Open MP and Police Minister Nixon Duban saying it is important for the province and must be progressed.
Looking ahead
The industry faces several challenges, including the need to improve productivity, achieve great scale, and deal with high operating costs and infrastructure constraints. R D Tuna’s Pete Celso says reducing the cost of freight is a major challenge, as export is a ‘volume game.’
Sylvester Pokajam at the National Fisheries Authority says the planned doubling of domestic tuna processing capacity for early 2013 is only the start of a new expansionary phase.
‘This is not the end, as we still have further growth in processing planned, with thousands more jobs being created.’

Papua New Guinea: A sporting chance

Oxford Business Group

Papua New Guinea’s (PNG’s) tourism industry faces another tough year after being passed over for funding in PNG’s record K13 billion (US$6.16b billion) budget in November 2012. However, the 2015 XV Pacific Games (XVPG) may give the sector a boost.
The Tourism Promotion Authority’s (TPA) request of K10m (US$4.74m) – 0.07% of the budget’s total – for an international media campaign was an attempt to elevate the country’s profile across international markets. The Budget Committee’s rebuttal, however, was a blow to the sector and the TPA, which has campaigned for greater commitment from the government.
While the government’s focus on the development of core services, including education, health and infrastructure, outlined in the 2013 budget is clearly of prime importance, advocates of PNG’s tourism sector have pointed to the industry’s sustainable long-term and grass roots potential throughout the country.
The TPA drew up a Tourism Master Plan 2007-17, although it does not have the funds for the plan to have maximum impact. Although the sector posted 12.8% growth in 2011, attracting 165,059 tourists, it has yet to overcome severe transport constraints.
Moreover, ongoing disputes between the sector’s three key agencies -- the TPA, the National Cultural Commission, and the National Museum and Art Gallery -- and the Office of Tourism, Arts and Culture (OTAC), has only made the situation more difficult, according to interviews OBG has conducted with sector players. While a merger of the agencies under OTAC has been outlined in the 2013 budget, relations between the parties remain sour after unilateral moves by OTAC to assume control in recent years have exceeded its mandate.
However, 2015 may prove to be the catalyst for change. Hosting the XVPG in 2015 in Port Moresby, PNG is determined to showcase its progress in the almost 40 years since independence from Australia in 1975. PNG has already billed the XVPG as “the best ever”, and at the beginning of 2013, it launched an extensive programme of renovation and development worth K77m (US$36.47m).
Although the XVPG will be held in Port Moresby alone, it is an unprecedented opportunity to showcase all 22 provinces, which was the backbone of PNG’s “Experience the Diversity” bid. The last Pacific Games held in PNG in 1991 attracted an estimated global audience of 2.5 million yet this was before the advent of content demand by cable, satellite and web-based broadcasters, which the XVPG’s organising committee hopes to capitalise on. Moreover, the committee will be looking to incorporate attractions from around the country into the design of the events.
Hosting the games will undoubtedly provide a significant boost to PNG’s local economy, which has already begun to benefit from the construction of the $19 billion, Exxon-Mobil-led PNG liquefied natural gas project. Yet the XVPG and the facilities being developed for the event will also give PNG an added edge in competing for future sporting events. While it has an established record of hosting smaller sporting events, success here will provide an important platform for sports tourism and the sector as a whole.
The hospitality and meetings, incentives, conferences and exhibitions segments may also benefit from the 2015 XVPG, once the construction work on a 9700-sq-metre International Convention Centre, currently being built adjacent to the Parliament House and the National Museum, is completed in 2015.
With sponsors already lining up to capitalise on the opportunities that the XVPG presents, including PNG’s largest bank, Bank South Pacific (BSP), the nation’s economic confidence expressed in the government’s 2013 budget is currently reflected by the private sector. However, with PNG’s poor reputation for maintenance of its facilities well established, the country cannot afford to miss its goals, nor fail to meet expectations in 2015.
For the tourism industry in particular, the XVPG is the best shot the industry has to capitalise upon largely unpaid global media coverage in the next few years. The XVPG’s organising committee has opened discussions with the TPA, airlines and industry service providers to provide potential packages to visitors, which will include tickets for the games and travel. However, details of these and their potential catchment have yet to be confirmed.
While the XVPG may yet be the catalyst for bolstering PNG’s tourism sector, there is much work to be done to ensure that not only are the games a success, but also that the country’s international profile receives a much-needed makeover.

World biology team returns with PNG haul

Source: AAP

A mission to document Papua New Guinea's natural treasures has seen scientists collect 1.5 million wildlife specimens.
An international consortium of scientists say they have collected 1.5 million specimens of wildlife in an unprecedented mission to document the biological treasures of Papua New Guinea.
Marine invertebrates, fungus, algae, plants and roughly half a million insects were among the bounty from the three-month exploration of one the world's last biodiversity hotspots, they said at a press conference in Paris.
"This operation has no precedent in terms of scale, logistical demands and on-the-grounds skills," said Thomas Grenon, head of France's National Museum of Natural History, which spearheaded the 200-member effort.
"These are not skills you get from reading instruction manuals."
Biologists from 20 countries took part in the arduous mission, which focussed on ecologically-rich areas ranging from the Bismarck Sea to Mount Wilhelm, PNG's highest mountain.
PNG is the eastern part of the island of New Guinea, whose western part is Indonesia.
The island's rainforests are the third biggest in the world after the Amazon and the Congo.
Although New Guinea covers just 0.5 per cent of Earth's landmass, it holds up to eight per cent of the world's known species, according to the environment group WWF.
In the decade from 1998 to 2008, biologists identified more than 1000 new species, including a frog with fangs, a blind snake and a round-headed dolphin.
"We brought back around 1.5 million specimens, and there will be many previously undiscovered species among them," said Grenon.
"On average, though, it takes some 20 years between acquiring a specimen and formally identifying it."

Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Shortage in corn seeds


Source: The National, Wednesday, February 27, 2013

Story and picture by MALUM NALU

BRIAN BELL, the major supplier of agriculture seeds in the country, has to turn away hundreds of potential customers after it ran short of corn seeds.
There has been a massive demand from residents – both within the city and elsewhere – after the recent heavy rain
For instance yesterday at Brian Bell Boroko, with people turned up and asked for corn seeds, only to be told that supplies had run out.
A sign at the agriculture counter advised them that corn seeds had run out, and they should check again at the end of next month when new supplies arrived.
John Tokunai, a veteran radio journalist and now agricultural sales consultant with Brian Bell, told The National that corn was shipped in 870kg bags every quarter but sold out like “hot cakes”, especially during the rainy season.


John Tokunai with a sign that says it all
 “When the rain sets in, you see everybody lining up here,” he said.
“That’s when the hills of Port Moresby are turned into vegetable plots.
“Here at Boroko, when the corn seeds arrive, the queues can extend past Ori Lavi Haus and past the Tango shop, just waiting for Brian Bell to open.
“Once the door opens at 8am, even before the corn packets are priced, they are quickly distributed to customers.
“We just sell, sell, sell, because there are so many people and we want to get rid of the long queues of customers in waiting.
“You can see from that indication that sales of corn seeds are very, very fast, they sell like hot cakes.
“Right now, at the end of February, we don’t have corn seeds.”
“The next shipment is due in six weeks time.”
Tokunai said pak choi (Chinese cabbage), cucumber, capsicum, and snake beans were also fast sellers, as they grew rapidly in Port Moresby during the rainy season, and were a good source of income for many people in the city.

CPL to open new-look pharmacy, new store

Source: The National, Wednesday,  February 27, 2013

By MALUM NALU

TOMORROW is a red-letter day for CPL Group as it opens its newly-refurbished City Pharmacy store in Waigani Drive and a new store, Stop N Shop Express, at Airways Hotel.
“The newly-renovated City Pharmacy store in Waigani had undergone a top-to-bottom makeover and has a more customer-friendly layout,” CPL marketing manager Prue Go said.

The newly-renovated City Pharmacy store in Waigani
“It also now has a Boncafe outlet inside the store for that usual coffee fix.

Boncafe outlet
“On the other hand, CPL opens a new store in a convenience store set-up in Airways.
“It will have the basic grocery items as well as the health and beauty items of City Pharmacy.”
The CPL group, Papua New Guinea’s largest retailing network, plans to open the biggest supermarket set-up by far in the country between November and December this year at the site at the former Port Moresby Transport yard, just next to CPL’s Waigani Central Stop N Shop supermarket.
To its credit, CPL Group has now established six strong retail brands namely City Pharmacy, Stop N Shop, Hardware Haus, Boncafe, HomeMaker and Paradise Cinema.
As of 2011, the CPL Group had a combined retail operations of 56 stores nationwide and employed over 2,000 staff of which 95% were Papua New Guineans.
Its retail network spans health and beauty chains, grocery, hardware stores, coffee shops and multiplex cinema.