Bolivia
shelves $2.3 billion iron ore mine contract
By
Alex Emery
Bloomberg
LIMA
Petroleumworld.com
08 10 06
Bolivia's government postponed a $2.3 billion contract with Jindal Steel
& Power Ltd., India's third- biggest steelmaker, to develop the
Mutun iron ore mine, Planning Minister Carlos Villegas said.
Bolivia shelved
the contract, awarded June 2, to negotiate a greater share of profits
from the project, which includes a steel plant and a sponge iron factory,
Villegas said in a statement on the president's Web site.
``The government
won't take a decision until we can guarantee more earnings for the state,''
Villegas said in the statement.
The decision comes
after President Evo Morales seized oil and gas fields May 1 to force
companies to renegotiate contracts to pay higher royalties. The government
also ordered Rio de Janeiro-based energy company EBX Group to leave
the country in April on allegations EBX violated environmental rules.
``Bolivia doesn't
want private investment unless it's under their conditions,'' Eduardo
Gamarra, director of Latin American & Caribbean Studies at Florida
International University, said in a telephone interview days after a
visit to Bolivia. ``Foreign investment has basically disappeared.''
Jindal, which had
been negotiating for about 2 1/2 years with the Bolivian administration,
in June won the rights to mine half of El Mutun's probable iron ore
reserves, or 20 billion tons. The contract established the company would
pay royalties to Bolivia for export of ore, finished steel and pellets.
Jindal's Bombay-traded
shares rose 74.05 rupees, or 5.1 percent, to 1,537.6 on Aug. 9. The
shares have dropped 10 percent since the company won the original contract.
El Mutun
El Mutun, near Bolivia's
southeastern border with Brazil and Paraguay, is estimated to produce
1.5 million tons of iron ore a year, create 10,000 jobs and generate
$200 million a year in export revenue, according to the Production Ministry.
The Municipality
of Puerto Suarez, where the deposit is located, threatened to hold protests
if the government doesn't accelerate the contract process, according
to Santa Cruz-based daily El Deber.
Benchmark contract
iron ore prices from Australia's Hammersley mine have risen by a third
in the past 18 months to $65 a metric ton, according to Metal Bulletin.
World iron imports this year will total 753 million tons, of which 353
million tons will be bought by China, according to Canaccord Capital.
To
contact the reporter on this story:
Alex Emery in Lima at aemery1@bloomberg.net
Bloomberg
August 9, 2006 19:14 EDT
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