Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Travel News .




TRADE WARS
Australia's resources, boom or bust?
by Staff Writers
Sydney (UPI) Dec 13, 2012


Investment costs in Australia's resource sector must be cut to maintain a good pipeline of projects, a government official said.

"Australia is still exceptionally well placed from an investment point of view," Australia's Minister for Resources and Energy Martin Ferguson said Thursday I a report in The Australian newspaper.

"We've got a good pipeline of investment but our capacity to maintain that investment pipeline is going to be very much related to our capacity to actually reduce the cost of investing in Australia."

The minister's comments follow the release Wednesday of a report from the Bureau of Resources and Energy Economics predicting that the country's resources and energy exports would be worth $184 billion in 2012-13, down $9 billion from the previous year.

That's the second downward revision by BREE and an about-face from six months ago when Asia-led demand was strong enough that the bureau was predicting a bumper year in which exports would total $209 billion.

The bureau predicts that revenues from iron ore, the country's leading export, will fall 13 percent and the value of steel making coal exports will fall 24 percent.

"Further growth in Australia's export earnings from resources and energy will depend on increased volumes. This is because resource commodity prices, with a few exceptions, are not expected to return, in real terms, to their historic highs of 2011-12," the report states.

A BREE report last month showed record investments in Australian resources and energy projects, with committed investment of $280.2 billion for 87 major projects.

Separately Thursday, the Minerals Council of Australia released a report identifying four major hurdles to investment in the country's mining sector: constrained labor markets, an onerous approvals process associated with mining activities, inadequate capacity planning and economic regulations.

"Rebooting the boom places a premium on cost control, timelines, flexibility and adaptability along the full length of the minerals supply chain," the report states.

In a report for The Conversation, Jeffrey Wilson from Murdoch University's Asia Research Center, says that references to a "bust" in the Australian mining industry are overstated.

"The resource boom is not turning to bust," Wilson says in the report.

Instead, he says, the investment- and employment-heavy development stage experienced by the sector is winding up, and announcements of new capital expenditure by mining companies will become less frequent, while cost saving exercises will become more common.

Wilson maintains that such an environment "is hardly the alarmist scenario that some in industry and the media have portrayed."

.


Related Links
Global Trade News






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








TRADE WARS
Rio sells mine stake to China-S. Africa consortium
Sydney (AFP) Dec 12, 2012
Anglo-Australian mining giant Rio Tinto said Wednesday it had sold its majority stake in South African copper producer Palabora for US$373 million to Chinese and South African interests. A binding agreement had been reached to offload its 57.7 percent holding to a consortium led by South Africa's Industrial Development Corporation and Chinese state-run Hebei Iron and Steel Group, it announce ... read more


TRADE WARS
Russia works to fix satellite's off-target orbit

ULA Launch Monopoly to End

SPACEX Awarded Two EELV Class Missions From The USAF

Russia Set to Launch Telecoms Satellite for Gazprom

TRADE WARS
Curiosity Rover Nearing Yellowknife Bay

Charitum Montes: a cratered winter wonderland

Opportunity Continues Rock Studies

Orbiter Spies Where Rover's Cruise Stage Hit Mars

TRADE WARS
Apollo's Lunar Dust Data Being Restored

To the moon and back for less than 2 billion dollars

NASA's GRAIL Creates Most Accurate Moon Gravity Map

Chinese astronauts may grow veg on Moon

TRADE WARS
Halfway Between Uranus and Neptune, New Horizons Cruises On

Dwarf planet Makemake lacks atmosphere

Keck Observations Bring Weather Of Uranus Into Sharp Focus

At Pluto, Moons and Debris May Be Hazardous to New Horizons Spacecraft During Flyby

TRADE WARS
Astronomers discover and 'weigh' infant solar system

Search for Life Suggests Solar Systems More Habitable than Ours

Do missing Jupiters mean massive comet belts?

Brown Dwarfs May Grow Rocky Planets

TRADE WARS
North Korea launches long-range rocket

US to launch anew secretive space plane

N. Korea replacing faulty rocket stage: report

N. Korea completes installing rocket: report

TRADE WARS
Mr Xi in Space

China plans manned space launch in 2013: state media

China to launch manned spacecraft

Tiangong 1 Parked And Waiting As Shenzhou 10 Mission Prep Continues

TRADE WARS
Big Asteroid Tumbles Harmlessly Past Earth

Student Team Provides Real-Time Video of Asteroid Toutatis

What is Creating Gullies on Vesta?

Heliophysics Nugget: Sungrazing Comets as Solar Probes




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement