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Wednesday, 29 August 12
COLOMBIA'S MINING BOOM: PART ONE - JOSEPH KIRSCHKE
COALspot.com - Colombia stands before one of the potentially largest, most diversified mining booms in the world. Untold reserves of gold, coal, copper, silver and other metals and minerals are luring prospectors, geologists and extractive companies—mostly Canadian multinationals, which account for more than half the world's mining activity.
But the foreigners descending on Colombia may be in for a rocky ride. Beneath an investor-friendly atmosphere are dangerous fault lines—social, political, environmental and community-linked fissures that could create shockwaves for the companies and the communities in which they operate across the country.
Colombia's burgeoning extractive sector offers an intriguing snapshot of an increasing global trend, one where fast-industrializing countries like China and India give international mining unprecedented importance, while bolstering growth in smaller emerging markets—in places like South Africa, Indonesia, the Ukraine, Kazakhstan, Mongolia and elsewhere in Latin America.
Metals like copper and fuels like coal are crucial as never before. Alternative energy projects and technology are dependent on minerals and metals, putting a premium on those materials. Precious metals like gold and silver, meanwhile, remain treasured commodities amid global uncertainties.
This year, according to the Metals Economics Group (MEG), a research consultancy, global spending on significant, non-ferrous metals alone soared to $18.2 billion—50 percent over last year, and double the $8.4 billion spent in 2009. Last year alone witnessed $132 billion in industry mergers and acquisitions.
A nation transformed
Colombia and its economic engine herald a wealth of opportunities. International businessmen are permeating the industrial capital of Bogota and its commercial hub, Medellin. The World Bank calls it the safest Latin American country in which to do business. Colombia's economy has grown four times as fast Canada's over the past 10 years.
Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) quadrupled between 2002 and 2008. Between 2010 and 2011 it grew from $6.8 billion to $14.4 billion. And as of last year, according to the United Nations Conference of Trade and Investments, Colombian FDI surpassed the rest of South America.
"Colombia has been transformed in the international scene—it's a place people see as stable and easy to deal with culturally," said Alexis Arthur, a program associate and expert on Colombia at the Inter-American Dialogue, a Washington think tank. "Colombia in general has become a regional leader."
Colombia boasts a savvy business community and a well-educated population; it is also the only South American nation never to have defaulted on a major loan. And despite decades of civil war and instability, it remains home to its strongest political institutions.
The picture isn't perfect. Colombia also has the worst income disparities on the continent. With unemployment well over 12 percent, well over half of Colombians live in poverty.
Colombia's promise lies in its metals and minerals—the centerpiece of President Juan Manuel Santos' domestic policy. And while mining represents just 2.3 percent of Colombia's economy—with $2.6 billion in investments last year—this is expected to change, fast. This year, Bogota anticipates $10 billion in mining and energy investments. To date, the government has set aside a 7.4 million-acre "strategic zone"—a land mass the size of Greece—for mining exploration.
Gold, most notably, is expected to draw $2 billion in FDI by 2015. Mining and Energy Ministry officials seek a 30 percent increase in gold output to 73 million tons. Proven reserves stand at 15,550 tons, according to the National Geological Survey. Giants like South Africa's AngloGold Ashanti and Canada's Barrick Gold are active on the ground.
As the world's fifth-biggest exporter, Colombia has more coal than any other Latin American nation. The government seeks a 35 percent increase to a 115-ton annual output by 2014, and hoping to double that by decade's end. The United States sources 75 percent of its coal from Colombia via entities like Drummond Company, Inc., an Alabama-based multinational. China has begun talks for constructing a $7.6 billion "dry canal" railroad, linking production sites to the country's Pacific Coast. Colombia has announced its own $3 billion, 1,000-mile rail project plans, with financing from the Inter-American Development Bank.
A Regional "Oasis"
Colombia stands out in a Latin American region where, since 2002, mining investment has doubled. Of the $60 billion Canada's mining sector has invested in developing nations, $41 billion has poured into Latin America. Latin America, according to the MEG, remains the world's leading target for mining investment.
Despite these inflows, "resource nationalism"—a worldwide trend wherein governments pursue greater shares of their natural wealth through increased taxes, regulation and outright nationalization—is no stranger to Latin America.
Last year, for example, Peru made changes to mining royalties, while in April the Argentine government announced plans to re-nationalize Treasury Petroleum Fields, a major company. Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez has made nationalization of foreign companies a signature political priority, while bringing outside investment to a trickle.
Not so for Colombian officials. Mining royalties linked to market prices and longer-lasting exploration permits have been primed for outsiders. "We don't want to scare off investors," Deputy Mining Minister Henry Medina Gonzalez said in April during an international exploration conference in Santiago. "We want to be as predictable as possible."
Against this backdrop and given irregular growth in China and stagnation in the United States and Europe, "Colombia is a kind of oasis in a convulsing and unpredictable world," Mining and Energy Minister Mauricio Cardenas told reporters at a Reuters Latin America Summit in May.
Such claims, however, have often contrasted with recent events. Days before the country celebrated its independence on July 20, guerrillas from the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC) put on their own display by destroying a bridge, killing a police officer and sabotaging a railway at a foreign-owned coal mine—the biggest one in the country.
Prospective perils
Following decades of drug-fueled bloodshed by cartels, guerillas and paramilitary groups, many Colombians have since experienced the trappings of peace. Over the last 10 years, advanced security techniques and sophisticated military hardware along with a sweeping crackdown—and over $7 billion in U.S. aid—have turned the tables against violence.
The Colombian government is now openly beckoning Canadian extractive companies. The relationship between Canada and Colombia was deeply pronounced at a 2011 event hosted by the Canadian Council of the Americas, where President Santos was anointed "Statesman of the Year." The Toronto Globe and Mail went on to credit Santos as "respecting the human rights of all."
There's no question Bogota has made decisive progress against violence: 54,000 paramilitaries are recorded demobilized; kidnappings are down 90 percent, terror attacks down 71 percent; homicides have been halved. (Former general Oscar Naranjo is now security advisor in cartel-ravaged Mexico, and Colombian military units are training police in Afghanistan.)
But a more troubling, if quieter, narrative has analysts' attention, too. The 40-year-old FARC remains active in 25 of Colombia's 32 municipal departments, while violence from government-formed paramilitaries and criminal gangs—and murky alliances between all three—is re-emerging.
A history of violence
"You hear this victory line—everything is great, it's all peaches and cream," said Vanda Felbab-Brown, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and an expert on illegal economies. "Washington succumbs to that, but there's a lot of stuff that hasn't improved."
Since all the "illegal" armed actors were never fully neutralized, rural Colombia remains unstable and drugs remain a serious problem. Colombia continues producing more cocaine than any other nation, according to the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, and precious metals themselves increasingly fuel the fire.
In November, armed forces intelligence commander General Javier Fernandez Leal announced that terrorist group financing is "50 percent mining and 50 percent narco-trafficking."
Larger-scale mining and huge profits, many believe, means the Colombia of yesteryear is poised for a comeback. "Colombia is at a typical Colombia moment," added Felbab-Brown. "The center systematically ignores the periphery—it has yet to extend a multifaceted state presence."
The violent reach of this periphery has been invisible to foreigners for years. On May 15, however, a FARC explosion shattered the silence, killing two in Bogota's financial district. In response, authorities deployed 3,000 members of the Colombian Army.
The events bear all the hallmarks of an ongoing trend. In 2011, according to Nuevo Arco Iris, a Colombian think tank monitoring illegal groups, there were 2,148 attacks nationwide—the most in 15 years—with a steady increase and sophistication in FARC attacks since 2009.
In this context, a mishandled resource expansion in Colombia, some believe, could trigger Latin America's severest civil unrest. "It's an eye-opening moment," said Patricia Vasquez, author of "Oil Sparks on the Amazon" and a fellow at the U.S. Institute for Peace. It's "the only place where conflict could be like Africa."
Santos is "right that the FARC are not the same as in the 1990s and are no strategic threat," in taking over Colombia, Nuevo Arco Iris Director Leon Valencia told RCN Radio. But "in several regions," he added, "the FARC are strengthening."
Evolving tactics, shifting alliances
The FARC rank-and-file are believed to have fallen from 17,000 to 8,000 members in recent years. Nonetheless, said Nuevo Arco Iris in a 17-page report, despite past successes "decapitating" FARC leadership, Colombian security forces are beginning to lose ground—with dire consequences.
The immediate FARC response has been Plan Pistola: The deployment of insurgent cells—with fewer than 30 members—as agile, hard-to-track infiltrators of cities. "Hit-and-run" tactics, with sniper ambushes and improvised explosives, have inflicted further military casualties.
This decentralization has made negotiations more difficult, according to observers like InSight, a risk analysis firm focusing on Latin America's organized crime. "As the FARC is stripped of its key military and political leaders," InSight reported in January, it "becomes more fragmented and similar to a criminal gang, focused on drug dealing, kidnapping and extortion"—frontal threats to foreign mining companies.
This, in turn, has created what's regarded the gravest threat to state security, according to Bogota: Bandas Criminales (BACRIMS)—a fusion of FARC guerrillas, ex-United Self Defense Forces of Colombia (AUC) paramilitaries and members of defunct drug cartels from Medellin and Norte de Valle.
Their nebulousness makes them hard to counteract, noted Vanda Felbab-Brown of the Brookings Institution. "The groups are much more elusive—the allegiances are very fluid," she said. "It's far less straightforward than counterinsurgency."
International observers say the BACRIMS are the worst human rights violators. Since 2010, according to the Office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), they bolstered a 40 percent uptick in civilian massacres; the U.S. State Department blames them for surges in urban homicides.
These neo-paramilitaries have great strength and scope in terms of political violence—and connections with the pinnacles of Bogota's power elite. In a "parapolitics" scandal last year, 40 former members of Congress were convicted of paramilitary ties, including Mario Uribe, an ex-president of Congress and second cousin of former President Alvaro Uribe.
Military abuses have also been well documented. The OHCHR says the army committed more than 3,000 extrajudicial killings between 2004 and 2008. A recent "false positives" scandal, in which civilians were deliberately slain and identified as combatants, also caused an international outcry.
There is much to suggest natural resources are behind much of this dislocation and discord. The National Mining Company Workers Union, for instance, has reported 87 percent of displaced populations coming from energy and mining-heavy regions—where 80 percent of the country's human rights abuses have taken place over the past decade.
But Canada's Parliament has responded with relative silence. In fact, in May, MPs shelved a human rights report within the Canada-Colombia Free Trade Agreement. The move was met with broad condemnation, as the report's provision was critical to the law's passage nine months earlier. (Part Two)
By: Joseph Kirschke
About Joseph Kirschk
Joseph Kirschke is a communications consultant for the Extractive Sector and Corporate Social Responsibility.
He can be reached at joseph.kirschke@outlook.com.
The above article was also published on worldpress.org. Views and opinions / conclusion expressed herein are personal views of the author and not that of COALspot.com.
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Tuesday, 13 February 24
WHAT IS THE OUTLOOK FOR THE NATURAL GAS SPOT PRICE IN 2024 AND 2025? EIA
We expect the U.S. benchmark Henry Hub natural gas spot price to average higher in 2024 and 2025 than in 2023, but to remain lower than $3.00 per m ...
Monday, 12 February 24
US THERMAL COAL EXPORTS HIT 5-YEAR HIGHS AND TOP $5 BLN IN 2023 - REUTERS
United States exporters of thermal coal earned more than $5 billion in 2023 as they shipped out more than 32.5 million metric tons of the high-poll ...
Tuesday, 06 February 24
NEW E-FUELS PROJECT TO MAKE INTERNATIONAL SHIPPING CLIMATE-NEUTRAL - RINA
Transport and trade on the ocean blue must be made much greener. This is the goal of the new €17 million European GAMMA project, where compani ...
Tuesday, 06 February 24
INDIA SEES ANNUAL COAL OUTPUT UP 10.9% IN 2024/25 - REUTERS
India expects domestic coal output to increase by 10.9% to 1.13 billion metric tons in the fiscal year ending March 2025, a senior government offic ...
Tuesday, 06 February 24
INDIA'S COAL PRODUCTION INCREASES BY 10.3% TO 99.73 MILLION TONNE IN JANUARY - PTI
The country’s coal output rose 10.3 per cent to 99.73 Million Tonne (MT) in January, over the same month in the previous fiscal.
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- Eastern Energy - Thailand
- AsiaOL BioFuels Corp., Philippines
- Gujarat Electricity Regulatory Commission - India
- Central Electricity Authority - India
- Indonesian Coal Mining Association
- San Jose City I Power Corp, Philippines
- Bank of Tokyo Mitsubishi UFJ Ltd
- Edison Trading Spa - Italy
- Madhucon Powers Ltd - India
- Global Green Power PLC Corporation, Philippines
- Electricity Authority, New Zealand
- Parry Sugars Refinery, India
- Vizag Seaport Private Limited - India
- Star Paper Mills Limited - India
- Indika Energy - Indonesia
- Bulk Trading Sa - Switzerland
- Kobexindo Tractors - Indoneisa
- Kapuas Tunggal Persada - Indonesia
- Filglen & Citicon Mining (HK) Ltd - Hong Kong
- Ind-Barath Power Infra Limited - India
- Merrill Lynch Commodities Europe
- Bhoruka Overseas - Indonesia
- Videocon Industries ltd - India
- Manunggal Multi Energi - Indonesia
- Medco Energi Mining Internasional
- Coastal Gujarat Power Limited - India
- Petrochimia International Co. Ltd.- Taiwan
- GMR Energy Limited - India
- Alfred C Toepfer International GmbH - Germany
- International Coal Ventures Pvt Ltd - India
- The University of Queensland
- Binh Thuan Hamico - Vietnam
- Siam City Cement PLC, Thailand
- Intertek Mineral Services - Indonesia
- GAC Shipping (India) Pvt Ltd
- Directorate Of Revenue Intelligence - India
- Sree Jayajothi Cements Limited - India
- Singapore Mercantile Exchange
- Indian Energy Exchange, India
- Sojitz Corporation - Japan
- Lanco Infratech Ltd - India
- Indo Tambangraya Megah - Indonesia
- Semirara Mining Corp, Philippines
- Thiess Contractors Indonesia
- Billiton Holdings Pty Ltd - Australia
- OPG Power Generation Pvt Ltd - India
- Bukit Baiduri Energy - Indonesia
- Orica Mining Services - Indonesia
- Jindal Steel & Power Ltd - India
- Mercuria Energy - Indonesia
- Leighton Contractors Pty Ltd - Australia
- Asmin Koalindo Tuhup - Indonesia
- Global Coal Blending Company Limited - Australia
- Iligan Light & Power Inc, Philippines
- Energy Link Ltd, New Zealand
- SN Aboitiz Power Inc, Philippines
- Electricity Generating Authority of Thailand
- The State Trading Corporation of India Ltd
- Indogreen Group - Indonesia
- Larsen & Toubro Limited - India
- Timah Investasi Mineral - Indoneisa
- Ministry of Transport, Egypt
- Latin American Coal - Colombia
- Bukit Makmur.PT - Indonesia
- Deloitte Consulting - India
- Commonwealth Bank - Australia
- Cigading International Bulk Terminal - Indonesia
- Bhushan Steel Limited - India
- Interocean Group of Companies - India
- Romanian Commodities Exchange
- Australian Coal Association
- European Bulk Services B.V. - Netherlands
- Asia Pacific Energy Resources Ventures Inc, Philippines
- Truba Alam Manunggal Engineering.Tbk - Indonesia
- SMG Consultants - Indonesia
- Sinarmas Energy and Mining - Indonesia
- Heidelberg Cement - Germany
- CIMB Investment Bank - Malaysia
- Bhatia International Limited - India
- Chettinad Cement Corporation Ltd - India
- Formosa Plastics Group - Taiwan
- Anglo American - United Kingdom
- Wilmar Investment Holdings
- Directorate General of MIneral and Coal - Indonesia
- Price Waterhouse Coopers - Russia
- Salva Resources Pvt Ltd - India
- GN Power Mariveles Coal Plant, Philippines
- Ambuja Cements Ltd - India
- South Luzon Thermal Energy Corporation
- PNOC Exploration Corporation - Philippines
- Samtan Co., Ltd - South Korea
- Independent Power Producers Association of India
- Borneo Indobara - Indonesia
- Malabar Cements Ltd - India
- Makarim & Taira - Indonesia
- Renaissance Capital - South Africa
- White Energy Company Limited
- Grasim Industreis Ltd - India
- Sarangani Energy Corporation, Philippines
- VISA Power Limited - India
- Mintek Dendrill Indonesia
- IHS Mccloskey Coal Group - USA
- Africa Commodities Group - South Africa
- MS Steel International - UAE
- GVK Power & Infra Limited - India
- Rio Tinto Coal - Australia
- Bahari Cakrawala Sebuku - Indonesia
- Straits Asia Resources Limited - Singapore
- Kideco Jaya Agung - Indonesia
- Oldendorff Carriers - Singapore
- Kaltim Prima Coal - Indonesia
- Semirara Mining and Power Corporation, Philippines
- Mjunction Services Limited - India
- Essar Steel Hazira Ltd - India
- Kohat Cement Company Ltd. - Pakistan
- Meralco Power Generation, Philippines
- Krishnapatnam Port Company Ltd. - India
- Georgia Ports Authority, United States
- Orica Australia Pty. Ltd.
- Cement Manufacturers Association - India
- Bangladesh Power Developement Board
- Parliament of New Zealand
- SMC Global Power, Philippines
- Jorong Barutama Greston.PT - Indonesia
- Bayan Resources Tbk. - Indonesia
- Chamber of Mines of South Africa
- Bharathi Cement Corporation - India
- Maheswari Brothers Coal Limited - India
- Australian Commodity Traders Exchange
- Globalindo Alam Lestari - Indonesia
- Xindia Steels Limited - India
- Aboitiz Power Corporation - Philippines
- Global Business Power Corporation, Philippines
- Banpu Public Company Limited - Thailand
- Tata Chemicals Ltd - India
- Baramulti Group, Indonesia
- Ceylon Electricity Board - Sri Lanka
- Maharashtra Electricity Regulatory Commission - India
- Vedanta Resources Plc - India
- Thai Mozambique Logistica
- Eastern Coal Council - USA
- Gujarat Mineral Development Corp Ltd - India
- Siam City Cement - Thailand
- Altura Mining Limited, Indonesia
- Bukit Asam (Persero) Tbk - Indonesia
- Carbofer General Trading SA - India
- Neyveli Lignite Corporation Ltd, - India
- Barasentosa Lestari - Indonesia
- Mercator Lines Limited - India
- IEA Clean Coal Centre - UK
- TeaM Sual Corporation - Philippines
- Miang Besar Coal Terminal - Indonesia
- Pendopo Energi Batubara - Indonesia
- Antam Resourcindo - Indonesia
- Posco Energy - South Korea
- McConnell Dowell - Australia
- Minerals Council of Australia
- Uttam Galva Steels Limited - India
- Port Waratah Coal Services - Australia
- Ministry of Mines - Canada
- PetroVietnam Power Coal Import and Supply Company
- Wood Mackenzie - Singapore
- Central Java Power - Indonesia
- Savvy Resources Ltd - HongKong
- CNBM International Corporation - China
- Marubeni Corporation - India
- TNB Fuel Sdn Bhd - Malaysia
- Energy Development Corp, Philippines
- Power Finance Corporation Ltd., India
- Planning Commission, India
- London Commodity Brokers - England
- Meenaskhi Energy Private Limited - India
- PTC India Limited - India
- ICICI Bank Limited - India
- Aditya Birla Group - India
- Sindya Power Generating Company Private Ltd
- LBH Netherlands Bv - Netherlands
- Karaikal Port Pvt Ltd - India
- Therma Luzon, Inc, Philippines
- Tamil Nadu electricity Board
- Holcim Trading Pte Ltd - Singapore
- Ministry of Finance - Indonesia
- Pipit Mutiara Jaya. PT, Indonesia
- Jaiprakash Power Ventures ltd
- Kalimantan Lumbung Energi - Indonesia
- Offshore Bulk Terminal Pte Ltd, Singapore
- Economic Council, Georgia
- Dong Bac Coal Mineral Investment Coporation - Vietnam
- Simpson Spence & Young - Indonesia
- Dr Ramakrishna Prasad Power Pvt Ltd - India
- Goldman Sachs - Singapore
- Attock Cement Pakistan Limited
- Petron Corporation, Philippines
- Vijayanagar Sugar Pvt Ltd - India
- Coal and Oil Company - UAE
- Karbindo Abesyapradhi - Indoneisa
- Metalloyd Limited - United Kingdom
- New Zealand Coal & Carbon
- Dalmia Cement Bharat India
- Rashtriya Ispat Nigam Limited - India
- ASAPP Information Group - India
- Sakthi Sugars Limited - India
- Kumho Petrochemical, South Korea
- Toyota Tsusho Corporation, Japan
- Standard Chartered Bank - UAE
- Kartika Selabumi Mining - Indonesia
- Coalindo Energy - Indonesia
- Kepco SPC Power Corporation, Philippines
- Trasteel International SA, Italy
- Riau Bara Harum - Indonesia
- Sical Logistics Limited - India
- India Bulls Power Limited - India
- Agrawal Coal Company - India
- Indian Oil Corporation Limited
- Gujarat Sidhee Cement - India
- PowerSource Philippines DevCo
- The Treasury - Australian Government
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