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Mapungubwe NP Under Threat

Please help us

I don’t know how many of you know Mapungubwe National Park. It is a beautiful, unspoiled part of the Transfrontier park with Botswana. It is very important for us to stand together to protect this magnificent piece of our natural heritage. Why is this so critical? Because they want to start mining in its vicinity!!!

We NEED to preserve this area and its rich diversity of fauna & flora and also protect the Limpopo river basin.

If you have time PLEASE go and sign the petition & forward it to people you know:

http://www.thepetitionsite.com/1/mapungubwe-threatened-by-adjacent-coal-mine

For further reading if you are interested:

http://www.miningweekly.com/print-version/moving-on-up-2009-03-13

See this shocking part – “Mining at an initial rate of one-million tons a year to 1,5 million tons of coking coal a year will start in the third quarter of this year and will ramp up to 5 million tons a year."

http://www.sanparks.org/parks/mapungubwe/news/2009/media_release_mapungubwe.pdf

http://www.miningmx.com/news/energy/596827.htm

According to an interview on Radio 702, Mapungubwe stands a very good chance of losing it's World heritage status should the mining operations go ahead. Part of the motivation for this status was made on spiritual grounds and the mining operations would render those grounds null and void. This would put South Africa in great disrepute as far as the running of other World heritage sites are also concerned.

A spokesman for the Peace Parks Project was also interviewed and according to him this would be a huge setback and the possibilities are there that this project would not be able to go ahead at all.

Thank you for your time.

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Mine Prospecting Threat In Blyde Canyon Park

HOEDSPRUIT (Kruger Park Times)- When announcing the expected proclamation of the Blyde River Canyon National Park, environmental affairs minister Marthinus van Schalkwyk said that “the canyon and its surrounds contain amongst the richest combination of plants and animals in southern Africa.”

This rich biodiversity is now threatened in some areas by applications made to prospect for gold and silver on farms adjoining the park, and possibly also one farm inside the park’s boundaries. An application to prospect on the farm London, which immediately borders the Blyde River Canyon Park, has been lodged with the department of minerals and energy by Tamarron Trading 157 (Pty) Ltd.

In the environmental management plan that accompanies the application, the intention is announced to prospect for gold and silver using a JCB/backactor, three types of drilling equipment and a high density concentrator, with about 40 prospecting boreholes or trenches being created. The plan also indicates that roads will need to be constructed in order to prospect.

Since the prospecting application came to the attention of the Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency (MTPA), they have opposed this application and others that have been lodged in the past, as any mining activities are likely to negatively impact on several red data species, as well as potentially damage sensitive wetlands of extremely high conservation importance.


MTPA spokesperson Jimmy Masombuka indicated that the wetlands are regarded as “irreplaceable” in the province’s Strategic Environmental Assessment plan. Not only are the wetlands in the immediate vicinity thought to be under threat, but a tributary of the Treur river runs through the proposed prospecting area. If pollution or contamination from any prospecting activities passed along this tributary into the Treur itself, the once extinct and now re-introduced critically endangered Treur river barb is likely to be harmed.

The pollution could also potentially pass into the Blyde River, one of the cleanest rivers in the country and the saving grace of the health of the lower Olifants River. Mercury, a dangerous environmental toxin, is often used in small scale gold mining operations.

Cyanide salts are also commonly used to purify gold. Further, in an assessment carried out by SANBI(South African National Biodiversity Institute), the farm London was earmarked as having a high biodiversity value and was intended to be put forward for gazetting as a protected environment in terms of the Protected Areas Act early next year.

The area has also been registered as a Natural Heritage Site. Despite the sensitivity of the area, the environmental management plan submitted in support of the prospecting application is merely a standard 19-page document supplied by the department of minerals and energy in which details have been filled in by hand.

Although one section of the MTPA was informed by the department of minerals and energy (DME) of the prospecting application as is routine, it seems that the MTPA in its role as custodians of the Blyde River Canyon Park was not considered to be an interested and affected party.

They are not identified as such in the environmental management plan submitted to DME, despite the fact that they are named as an adjacent farm in the same document. The only interested and affected party named is Global Forest Products, who own the land where the prospecting is planned. Global Forest Products has declined to comment on the issue as they say they have instigated legal proceedings regarding the matter and they do not wish to jeopardise these proceedings.

However, sources indicate that Global Forest Products and the MTPA have been in consultation about the possibility of creating a small sustainable boutique hotel on the farm London, away from the sensitive wetland, which the potential prospecting or mining activities could jeopardise.

Sources also indicate that a previous application made to prospect on the farm London has been approved despite vehement objections from Mpumalanga Tourism and Parks Agency. The Department of Minerals and Energy spokesperson said that confirmation of the status of the application could only be released through recourse to the Public Access to Information Act.

The Kruger Park Times telephoned Philipp Betz, who is listed as the contact person in the Tamarron Trading application. Betz declined to comment on the matter over the telephone, and a mutually convenient location and time for discussion could not be made before going to press. Sources have linked Betz’s name to other prospecting applications on other farms in and around the Blyde River Canyon Park, namely Berlyn and The Peak, which have also been opposed by the MTPA.

MTPA spokesperson Jimmy Masombuka said that the department “will consider the relevant channels to challenge the issue.” The matter of the opposed prospecting applications has apparently been taken from a regional to a national level, and the department of environmental affairs and tourism and the department of minerals and energy should be engaged in cooperative governance discussions to decide whether the search for new gold and silver mines may go ahead in what Marthinus van Schalkwyk has described as an area that “has the potential to become one of the fastest growing malaria-free tourism destinations in Africa”.

By Melissa Wray
Kruger Park Times

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Mine Expansion On The Cards

JOHANNESBERG- Shares in Palabora Mining, South Africa’s biggest copper producer located in the middle of the K2C Biosphere in Phalaborwa, gained by a quarter after the company hosted an analyst visit at which it detailed output trends and a possible R3.2bn expansion.



Palabora, controlled by Rio Tinto Group, could start a study next year into the viability of extending the mine’s life beyond 2015, according to a presentation posted on its website after the visit. The company also plans to increase sales of magnetite, a type of iron ore, and to process stocks of copper ore that were previously unprofitable to treat, the presentation said.

It’s too early to say whether Palabora will borrow money to finance the project, which could start as early as 2008 and take eight years to complete, Chief Financial Officer Charles Asubonten said yesterday from his office in Phalaborwa.

The stock gained on improved production, the weaker rand and high copper prices, said Nick van Rensburg, who attended the visit and helps manage a $300m fund at Peregrine Capital.

Shares of Palabora, which operates South Africa’s largest copper mine, jumped 25% to R44,50 since the October 6 visit. The stock climbed 8,7% on October 9, the first day of trading after the visit.

Investment in increasing the life of the mine could take place over a decade, Nick Cobban, a spokesman for London-based Rio, said in a telephone interview on Tuesday from its London headquarters. He gave no further details.

Palabora plans to mine about 11m tons of copper-bearing ore this year, and 12m in 2007/8, compared with 10m tons in 2005, according to the presentation.

An increase in production will help offset the affect of agreements the company made last year to sell a portion of its production at less than half the current market price for seven years. The contracts cut Palabora’s exposure to copper prices, which quadrupled in the last five years, spurred by Chinese demand for materials to fuel its booming economy.

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Copper Mine Output Falls

JOHANNESBURG- Palabora Mining (Palamin) [JSE:PAM] which operates South Africa's largest copper mine in Limpopo said yesterday it had produced less refined new copper in the first half of this year than in the previous first half last year because of a planned 35-day smelter shutdown in February and March.

This occurred as the copper price reached fresh peaks. The copper price more than doubled to R58,035 ($8,084) a metric tonne at the end of last month from R23,535 ($3,278) a year ago on a combination of rand weakness and strong global commodities prices.

The company said yesterday daily production from under ground operations averaged 29,392 metric tonnes in the June quarter despite two four-day stoppages in the production hoists.

Palamin MD Keith Marshall said in the group's latest annual report, released last month, that the target was 30,000 metric tonnes a day. Palamin hoisted a total of 2.64 million metric tonnes of ore in the June quarter at a grade of 0.70%, slightly lower than the grade in the March quarter. Total mill throughput was similar to the March quarter's.

Palabora mine produced 28,500 (29,700) metric tonnes of copper in concentrates in the first half of the year, while the Palabora smelter produced 34,000 (39,300) of new copper anodes and 36,200 (37,700) metric tonnes of new refined copper. Vermiculite production also fell, in line with plan, because of a decline in the plant feed grade, while magnetite production rose.

Palamin took steps in its past financial year to become a more sustainable operation.

Marshall said in the annual report this year, that management would address one of the major constraints to under ground production - which was the age of the underground loader fleet.

Last year Palamin had to reduce its underground reserves by about 60-million metric tonnes, or five years' production, to 142 million metric tonnes because of subsidence on the northwest wall of the open pit, which made it impossible to reach some of the ore.

Palamin also said today it expects first-half headline earnings to rise to between R312 million ($43 million) and R260 million ($36 million) from the previous period’s R209 million loss ($29 million), it said today.

The company said it expects basic earnings to rise to between R300 million ($42 million) and R250 million ($35 million) and that the difference between basic and headline earnings is due to an impairment charge of one of its plants and profit on sale of fixed assets.

Headline earnings exclude capital, non-trading and some extraordinary items and is a key measure of profit in South Africa.

Palamin is 49% owned by Rio Tinto Group [NYSE:RTP] and 28.5% by Anglo American [LSE:AAL].

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Substantial Expansion Planned For Phalaborwa Phosphate Mine

State-owned phosphate-rock-miner and processor Foskor plans to expand its pyroxenite mining by increasing production in Phalaborwa's south pyroxenite open pit by 20 million to 30 million tons of ore a year.

Foskor currently mines pyroxenite from the north pit and foskorite from surface stockpiles, both of which contain phosphate. The phosphate rock, in turn, is used to produce phosphoric acid. Phosphoric acid is used in a number of applications, including fertilisers, animal feed and in food preservatives.

The south pyroxenite pit will have a lifespan of more than 70 years at the planned production rate. Foskor is the only phosphate producing mine of this size in the country.

The project, located in the Limpopo Province, is planned in two phases, with the first phase, involving feasibility and technical-cost study, scheduled for completion by January 2007.

Project approval is planned for March 2007, and will be followed by a second phase of project implementation.

According to Foskor project executive Anton Nienaber, the project will involve the development of the open pit, the selection of the drill- and-blast and load-and-haul contractors and the design and construction of the required processing plant.

“All phases are scheduled for completion by the end of 2009, when full-scale production from the new pit is expected,” he says.

Nienaber adds that the current operation satisfies the country’s present domestic needs for phosphate rock.

The pyroxenite production expansion is required to replace the depleting reserves of foskorite ore.

“The marginally-developed south pyroxenite openpit is currently mined by other companies for vermiculite, which occurs near the surface.”

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Foskor Buys R95M Phalaborwa Chemical Plant

PHALABORWA- Chemoil group Sasol announced today that it had reached an in principle sale to Foskor and the Industrial Development Corporation of Sasol Nitro's phosphoric acid plant at Phalaborwa for R95 million.

The companies have agreed that Foskor will acquire the productive and storage assets of Sasol Nitro's phosphoric acid plant.

Sasol will retain the gypsum disposal dumps and will allow Foskor to deposit gypsum by-products from the plant onto the dumps for up to four years.

Thereafter, Foskor will either take over the dumps or Sasol will close and rehabilitate them.

Certain Sasol employees at the plant will be offered employment by Foskor on transfer of the assets to Foskor.

"This agreement will save many jobs. Current and predicted economic conditions have made the production and marketing of phosphoric acid unsustainable for Sasol. Our options were either to close our plant and risk the loss of 250 permanent jobs or to dispose of the business as a going concern," Sasol Chief Executive Pieter Cox said in a statement.

"This acquisition will supplement Foskor's operations in Richards Bay and ensure continued viability of our mining operation in Phalaborwa. It should be a win-win situation for all involved, especially Sasol employees and the Phalaborwa community," Foskor Chief Executive Alfred Pitse said.

The agreement is subject to regulatory approvals and negotiation of the terms of a final agreement.

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