Australian uranium royalties scheme damaging for aborigines
Royalties scheme hurts Indigenous: Greens
The Australian Greens have accused the Federal Government of bowing to the uranium mining industry at the expense of the Northern Territory’s Aboriginal people over the issue of mining royalties.
The Senate is debating a bill that would extend the system whereby miners only pay royalties in the Territory if they are making a profit. Continue reading
U.N. Condemns Australia’s Policyin Aboriginal Communities
Australia U.N. Condemns ’07 Policyin Aboriginal Communities
A senior United Nations official on Thursday condemned Australia’s intervention in remote Aboriginal communities in 2007, describing the measures as discriminatory. The official, James Anaya, the special rapporteur on indigenous people, made the findings after a 12-day trip to Australia, where he visited indigenous communities and held talks with the government.
World Briefing – Australia – U.N. Condemns ’07 Policyin Aboriginal Communities – NYTimes.com
Uranium price “flat”
Flat outlook for uranium spot prices
Australian Mining 26 August 2009 | by Michael Mills
Equity research company Resource Capital Research (RCR) said it is not expecting any significant changes to uranium spot prices in the near term.
The uranium spot price is currently trading at US$47.50 per pound, down 8% from the US$52 three months ago.
At the end of December 2008, the prices were US$52.50 per pound.
…………. The long term contract uranium price is US$65.00 per pound, which is down from US$70 per pound price at December 2008.
http://www.miningaustralia.com.au/Article/Flat-outlook-for-uranium-spot-prices/495758.aspx
BHP warned over Roxby uranium mining boost plan
BHP warned over Roxby mining boost plan
ABC News By Jason Om 24 August 09The South Australian Government has told BHP Billiton to address a range of concerns before the Olympic Dam mine expansion at Roxby Downs can go ahead.
The Government has published its submission on the company’s draft environmental impact statement (EIS), which was released in May.
It says BHP Billiton needs to investigate further any radiation and air pollution impact on the Roxby Downs community, along with water, waste and transport issues.
The Government’s response says some aspects of the EIS are “not substantiated”, “unjustified” and “insufficient”………………..
A final Government decision on the mine expansion plan is expected next year.
BHP warned over Roxby mining boost plan – ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)
Olympic Dam EIS: Impact of the world’s biggest mine
Incomparable and unimaginable are not synonymous, but Olympic Dam is both. It will be the world’s biggest hole-in-the-ground, the largest copper and uranium quarry on the planet, the highest artificial mountain range on Earth and the richest mine since King Solomon………………….
The company will ultimately dig a hole 7.5 kilometres long, five kilometres wide and more than a kilometre deep.
Stacked up, the 44 billion tonnes or so of overburden would effectively create a new mountain range. Depending on its shape, it might be 20 kilometres wide in each direction and almost as high as Mt Lofty’s 720 metres………………………BHP has said it will not comment on the EIS after the weekend even though reporters can’t possibly read all the documents in the time available………..
………….The Independent Weekly understands that the Federal Government is planning much tougher safeguards relating to uranium sales to China, even if it’s gift-wrapped in copper concentrate. BHP does not yet have export permits for that uranium. In May next year nuclear non-proliferation nations, Australia included, will meet in New York. Australia may want a new international treaty to make sure Olympic Dam uranium does not end up in Chinese bombs………….
…………….here’s a prediction. Tomorrow’s EIS will say the project can go ahead on environmental grounds. The company will start moving to begin expansion and hope for a global economic recovery to coincide with increased production. BHP will pass the break-even point on its multi-billion investment within the first two decades, and after that it’s money in the bank all the way down to the year 2100.
But first, there’ll be new legislation presented in State Parliament to legalise the process. It will be a new form of the 1982 Roxby Downs Indenture Ratification Act. It will, once again, over-ride every other Act of Parliament passed up to now and into the future. The first that South Australians see of that legislation will be after the state election.
And BHP Billiton’s Olympic Dam will have an economic and environmental impact that is synonymous with mining on this scale: incomparable and unimaginable.
Paladin Energy chairman sells 500,000 shares – Insiders – FP Trading Desk
Paladin Energy chairman sells 500,000 shares – Insiders Financial Post Trading Desk March 10, 2009, by Jonathan RatnerUranium, Market Call, SEDI, Insiders, PaladinRick Crabb, chairman at Paladin Energy Ltd., sold 500,000 company shares through Rick Wayne Crabb and Carol Jean Crabb between Feb. 27 and March 6, 2009. These shares were sold for prices ranging from $2.29 to $2.45 each, bringing these holdings to 4,698,050 shares. Paladin………… focuses on uranium projects in Africa and Australia, ……….
……… In an interview with WA Business News last week, Mr. Crabb said his recent share sales were part of an effort to improve his “personal balance sheet” …………………………………
Paladin Energy chairman sells 500,000 shares – Insiders – FP Trading Desk
Defence in the realm of fear
Defence in the realm of fear The Canberra Times 26 Feb 09 Although it is only early days for the Obama Administration, the President and his team have been conspicuously silent about whether they will persist with the Bush administration’s controversial doctrine of pre-emptive self-defence. Developed in response to the September 11 attacks, the Bush Doctrine, as it is known, asserts a right to use military force against perceived terrorist threats before those threats can materialise into actual armed attacks.Asked recently about the future of the doctrine, President-elect Barack Obama, as he was then, responded, ”We have to view our security in terms of a common security and a common prosperity with other peoples and other countries.” While this is by no means a repudiation of the doctrine, we can be hopeful that President Obama’s broader foreign policy objectives, which emphasise engagement and multilateralism, may signal a shift back to a pre-Bush position of adherence to the international rule of law.
The Bush Doctrine is a significant departure from accepted norms of international law. After World War II, the international community vowed to end the scourge of war and promote international peace and security through proper adherence to principles of justice and international law.
The UN Charter embodies that commitment. Article 2 (4) of the charter prohibits the use of force by one state against others and is considered such a fundamental principle of law that no nation has the right to depart from it.
Military force is allowed only if the Security Council authorises its use or a country acts in self-defence under Article 51 of the UN Charter…….
Launching pre-emptive strikes against Iran would also reinforce a dangerous precedent, established by the invasion of Iraq, that would enable other countries to act in the same way.
Countries such as Pakistan, India, China, North Korea and indeed Iran would be given the green light to advance similar claims and act pre-emptively if they believed they were threatened by another country.
……….The potential to misuse the doctrine of pre-emption is too great to make it an acceptable approach to maintaining global and regional security.
Australia has also given equivocal support for the doctrine of pre-emption. Although it has never been a stated policy objective, in an interview in 2004 John Howard insisted it was open to Australia to take pre-emptive action against terrorists, particularly in South-East Asia. This generated deep suspicion among our neighbours.
The Howard government also supported the invasion of Iraq, thereby endorsing the doctrine used by the US to justify the allied intervention.
The Rudd Government has always been critical of the Bush Doctrine but has not unequivocally disavowed it.
As one of its election commitments, the Government is commissioning a Defence white paper which, among other things, will set out Australia’s strategic defence and national security objectives. The Government should make clear in the white paper that the doctrine of pre-emption forms no part of Australia’s defence or foreign policy options.
This would not only honour Australia’s commitment to promoting the international rule of law but demonstrate the kind of global leadership that would be required of Australia if it is to gain a seat on the UN Security Council in 2013.
Defence in the realm of fear – Opinion – Editorial – General – The Canberra Times
Green Left – Traditional owner: don’t mine our land
Traditional owner: don’t mine our landJay Fletcher & Emma Murphy Green Left 4 February 2009 A multinational mining company that has been exposed for leaking uranium into Lake Ontario in North America is now exploring uranium deposits only a few kilometres from a significant Alice Springs water supply.Canadian resource giant, Cameco, has entered a joint venture with Australian Paladin Energy to explore and potentially mine the Angela Pamela uranium tenement 25 kilometres south of Alice Springs near the old outstation of Owen Springs.
Last year, Cameco was forced to admit to leaking uranium, arsenic and fluorides into Lake Ontario, one of the biggest lakes in North America. On May 23, ABC Alice Springs reported that the Port Hope refinery plant was closed when contaminated soil was discovered, but during the “clean-up” it is likely that tailings found their way into the harbour.Moreover, the company has been ordered to pay a C$1.4 million settlement to the state of Wyoming for failing to comply with environmental standards at its uranium mine. Among the charges were problems with the pace of ground water restoration, according to Canada’s Calgary Herald.
Traditional owner Raelene Silverton from Urana Potara community — located on the West Waterhouse station near Owen Springs — told Green Left Weekly in December that mining the site would create serious risk to local and Aboriginal communities. “There are a lot of people saying not to mine in there”, Silverton said. “There’s a bore there and Alice Springs communities get their water from there, it would be too dangerous.”
Cameco-Paladin were granted an exploration permit by the Northern Territory government in 2007. A May 27, 2008 media release from the Central Land Council (CLC) said that negotiations were being conducted with traditional owners, yet local owners such as Silverton, who do not want the plans to go ahead, say they have been excluded from the process.
Juggling nuclear interests tough job – Opinion – Editorial – General – The Canberra Times
Juggling nuclear interests tough job The Canberra Times CARL UNGERER2/02/2009 Nuclear weapons policy is high on the list of priorities for the administration of new United States President Barack Obama. In addition to advocating direct diplomatic engagement with both Iran and North Korea over nuclear proliferation concerns, the Administration has signalled a shift in policy direction across a broad range of nuclear-related issues.
If fully implemented, the scale and ambition of this policy shift will have direct consequences for Australia’s foreign and national security policy interests, including the Rudd Government’s new agenda for nuclear disarmament. Obama is likely to move quickly on strengthening the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, implementing a global ban on the production on new nuclear materials, stopping the development of new nuclear weapons, seeking dramatic reductions in stockpiles of nuclear weapons and material, and making the US-Russian ban on intermediate-range missiles a global agreement.
But not all members of the Obama team share this view………………
…………………India, in particular, unsure of its thermonuclear weapon design from the May 1998 tests, would welcome the opportunity to resume testing. Pakistan would immediately follow suit. And in the context of strained bilateral relations over recent terrorist attacks, could escalate nuclear tensions in South Asia to a dangerous new level.
Renewed nuclear testing among the major powers would consign the Comprehensive Nuclear Test Ban Treaty to the dustbin of history……………………
Australia has competing interests at stake in the nuclear weapons debate. Since signing the non-proliferation treaty in 1972, Australia has supported, with equal vigour, the extended nuclear guarantee and international arms control agreements that would eliminate nuclear weapons. And we have a growing interest in uranium exports. So far we have managed to balance these competing interests in ways that have not upset the US nuclear cart.
But under the Obama Administration, the gap between Australia’s advocacy of nuclear weapons elimination and US nuclear strategy is a potential source of diplomatic uneasiness.
Obama’s priorities to strengthen the non-proliferation treaty regime will likely fall short of the elimination pledge that Australia and others are seeking. And if the US implements its force modernisation plans, including a new round of nuclear weapons testing, Australia would be forced to censure the move.
Juggling nuclear interests tough job – Opinion – Editorial – General – The Canberra Times
Dissident Voice : Under The Cover Of Racist Myth, A New Land Grab In Australia
Under The Cover Of Racist Myth, A New Land Grab In Australiaby John Pilger / January 31st, 2009 DISSIDENT VOICE “…………………..Having let a few crumbs fall, Kevin Rudd has picked up where Howard left off. His indigenous affairs minister, Jenny Mackie, threatens to withdraw government support from remote communities that are “economically unviable”. The Northern Territory is the only region where Aborigines have comprehensive land rights, granted almost by accident 30 years ago. Here lies some of the world’s biggest deposits of uranium. Canberra wants to mine it and sell it.
Foreign governments, especially the US, want the Northern Territory as a toxic dump. The railway from Adelaide to Darwin, which runs adjacent to Olympic Dam, the world’s largest uranium mine, was built with the help of Kellog, Brown & Root, a subsidiary of the American giant Halliburton, the alma mater of Dick Cheney, Howard’s “mate”. “The land grab of Aboriginal tribal land has nothing to do with child sexual abuse,” says the Australian scientist Helen Caldicott, “but all to do with open slather uranium mining and converting the Northern Territory to a global nuclear dump.”
Dissident Voice : Under The Cover Of Racist Myth, A New Land Grab In Australia
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