Tag Archives: metals and mining

Kazakhstan fines ArcelorMittal

JUNE 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Steel producer ArcelorMittal Temirtau received a fine of 3.4m tenge (around $10,000) from the Kazakh government for failing to comply with its 2014 investment plan. The company, a subsidiary of Indian giant ArcelorMittal, operates the biggest steel producing plant in Central Asia. Slower demand for steel had forced the company to cut back investment and lay off workers in 2014. It had hoped that the reemergence of Iran into the international economy would boost sales.

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(News report from Issue No. 286, published on June 24 2016)

 

Manas halts trading before announcing Kyrgyz acquisitions

JUNE 23 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Australia-based Manas Resources said it halted trading on the Australian Stock Exchange as it prepares the announcement of new acquisition at its Kyrgyz operations. Manas is developing two gold mines in southern Kyrgyzstan. The trading halt is a precautionary measure adopted to avoid speculation over the company’s share price. Trading will resume on June 27, the company said.

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(News report from Issue No. 286, published on June 24 2016)

 

Mine brawl leaves injured people in Kazakhstan

JUNE 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – A brawl between private security guards and miners in Bestobe, a village 200km north-east of Astana, left as many as 16 people injured, highlighting a worsening labour dispute at the mine. Private security guards working for Kazakhaltyn, owned by Netherlands-based Institute Project, forcefully broke up a short-lived demonstration. Many of the miners said the incident echoed Zhanaozen, scene of violent clashes between police and oil workers that left at least 17 dead in 2011.

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(News report from Issue No. 286, published on June 24 2016)

 

Chaarat receives extension from Kyrgyz government

JUNE 21 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – British Virgin Island-registered Chaarat Gold said it received a two- year extension from the Kyrgyz government to present results for a gold mine it is exploring in north-west Kyrgyzstan. Now, Chaarat has to present a detailed development proposal for the mine by the end of 2018. The company completed a feasibility study for the mine, Chaarat’s only asset, in February.

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(News report from Issue No. 286, published on June 24 2016)

 

Kyrgyzaltyn changes board composition

JUNE 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Kyrgyz state-owned miner Kyrgyzaltyn said in a note that it had changed the composition of its board. Askar Oskombayev, adviser to the PM, will now serve as chairman, replacing Duishenbek Kamchybekov. Kyrgyzaltyn owns 32% of Canada’s Centerra Gold, which owns and operates the Kumtor gold mine in eastern Kyrgyzstan. Centerra and the government are currently embroiled in a legal battle to resolve disputes over ownership of the gold mine.

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(News report from Issue No. 286, published on June 24 2016)

 

Polymetal gets loan for its Kazakh project

JUNE 15 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Russian miner Polymetal said it reached an agreement with Sberbank for a $350m loan to finance the start-up of its Kyzyl project in north-eastern Kazakhstan. In 2015, it bought the Kyzyl project for $620m from Sumeru, a private group owned by Timur Kulibayev, son-in-law of Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev.

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(News report from Issue No. 285, published on June 17 2016)

 

Kyrgyzstan accuses Centerra of corruption at Kumtor

BISHKEK, JUNE 14 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Kyrgyz President Almazbek Atambayev instructed state prosecutors to investigate agreements signed by Canadian miner Centerra Gold in 2003-04, after corruption charges emerged against both Centerra and former officials at the state-owned Kyrgyzaltyn.

Earlier this week, the country’s security service said that Dastan Sarygulov, the 69-year-old former head of Kyrgyzaltyn from 1992 to 1999, had been charged with plotting a coup earlier this year and taking bribes in the 1990s.

The charges appear to be based on accusations made last week by Len Homeniuk, former head of Centerra and Kumtor Gold, who sent a letter to Kyrgyz prosecutors alleging corrupt practices that had involved the miner over its entire lifetime, explicitly naming Mr Sarygulov.

In the letter, Mr Homeniuk said that the companies he headed were regularly asked for bribes by Kyrgyzaltyn, which owns a 32% stake in Centerra.

“[Their requests] were sometimes very significant, more than $200,000 in a given month,” Mr Homeniuk wrote. “Dustan Sarygulov and Kamchybek Kudaibergenov always explained such requests that they were under pressure by the office of the President.”

Centerra, Kumtor Gold and Kyrgyzaltyn have not commented on the allegations.

The revelations seem to be well- timed for Kyrgyzstan.

Sarygulov was already under house arrest, accused of having participated in the coup plot.

Now, analysts say, the Homeniuk letter could be a powerful tool for Mr Atambayev to both discredit his predecessors and taint Centerra’s record in Kyrgyzstan, just as it prepares an arbitration case in Stockholm against the government for blocking its business development.

“Timing is important. Homeniuk’s revelations seem a gift to Mr Atambayev now,” Mars Sariyev of the Institute of Public Policy, a Bishkek-based think tank, told The Bulletin.

Centerra owns the Kumtor Gold Company, which operates the country’s largest gold mine, which accounts for around 7% of Kyrgyzstan’s GDP.

In March security forces raided the office of Kumtor in Bishkek looking for evidence of financial wrongdoing. Centerra has said that Kyrgyzstan is using heavy-handed tactics to try and claim more direct ownership of Kumtor.

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(News report from Issue No. 285, published on June 17 2016)

 

Business comment: Gold in Central Asia

JUNE 17 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) – Gold prices climbing up towards $1,300/ounce, but not everyone in the mining sector in Central Asia is happy.

In Kazakhstan, Russian miner Polymetal received a much-needed lifeline from Sberbank to push forward with its Kyzyl project in north-eastern Kazakhstan. The gold sector in Kazakhstan is enjoying a positive season, as production numbers in the country are up 3.7% to 13 tonnes of fine gold in the first five months of the year, compared to Jan.-May 2015.

The steady growth is paired with increased investment, as Polymetal is focusing its growth outside Russia on Kazakhstan and Armenia.

But this year has not brought only good news in Kazakhstan. In March, Alhambra Resources said it was seeking damages against Kazakhstan’s government, via the World Bank’s International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, for the bankruptcy of its Kazakh subsidiary.

Recovering commodity prices, however, can do little to improve the mood in Kyrgyzstan, where Centerra Gold and the government are increasingly entangled in what could become a decisive legal battle.

Centerra sought the resolution of the continuous fines and corruption probes at the Stockholm court of arbitration.

The Kyrgyz government responded with more fines and charged a former director of Kyrgyzaltyn — which owns a stake in Centerra — of taking bribes from the Canadian miner.

These charges, fuelled by allegations from a former Centerra director, would make the Canadian company guilty of paying bribes, serving an order to the government, which is trying hard to show Centerra under a bad light.

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(News report from Issue No. 285, published on June 17 2016)

 

Kyrgyz Prosecutor imposes ban on Centerra manager’s travel

JUNE 6 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — Canadian miner Centerra Gold said Kyrgyzstan’s Prosecutor has imposed a temporary ban on travel for some unnamed managers at the Centerra-controlled Kumtor Gold Company. The Kyrgyz government has not commented. Last week Centerra said that it had started arbitration proceedings against the Kyrgyz government in Stockholm for hindering its business in various ways.

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(News report from Issue No. 284, published on June 10 2016)

Tajik-Chinese JV produces first gold at mine in Tajikistan

DUSHANBE, JUNE 6 2016 (The Conway Bulletin) — A Chinese-owned mine has produced its first gold in Tajikistan, highlighting the growing influence and importance of China in the Tajik precious metals sector.

Another Chinese gold mining company, though, was accused of trying to dodge paying an environmental fine, a reminder of the complexity of business in the region.

Tajikistan’s government said Pokrud LLC, a Chinese-Tajik JV involving the China National Metallurgical and Mining Company mine, had held a licence to develop a mine 20km east of Dushanbe since 2003. Only far more recently, though, has work started on exploiting it.

Official news outlets quoted the visiting President Emomali Rakhmon as saying that investments to date in the mine totalled $256m. The Pokrud mine will produce around 1.3 tonnes of gold per year, giving the gold sector in Tajikistan a decent boost. It currently produces around 4 tonnes of gold per year.

At the other end of the spectrum, Chinese miner Zijin Mining, which operates the Zarafshan mine in the north of the country, was at the centre of a corruption probe this week.

Tajikistan’s anti-corruption agency, headed by Mr Rakhmon’s son, Rustam Emomali, said the company had finally paid off a 13.4m somoni ($1.7m) penalty for environmental damage owed since last year. He said that two of Zijin Mining’s managers had tried to dodge the payment by allegedly forging official documents. The two managers are now under investigation.

Zijin Mining bought a 75% stake in Zarafshan from Britain’s Common- wealth and British Minerals in 2007. Zarafshan is Tajikistan’s biggest gold mine.

The majority of the largest gold mining projects in Tajikistan are part- owned by Chinese companies. Tajikistan is looking to gold production, with Chinese help, and electricity exports to boost its GDP.

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Copyright ©The Conway Bulletin — all rights reserved

(News report from Issue No. 284, published on June 10 2016)