Friday, 15 Jul 2011
Reuters reported that an ongoing marketing dispute between miners Vale and Aquila Resources has so far cost 200,000 tonnes in lost shipments of steel making coal from the jointly owned Isaac Plains mine in Australia.
An Aquila spokesman said that "This has so far resulted in the cancellation of four shipments totaling about 200,000 tonnes of metallurgical coal."
The impasse comes after flooding in Australia's Queensland state coal belt earlier in 2011 had already hindered the mine's performance to reach its full production capacity of 2.8 million tonnes annually.
While production at the mine has continued and some individual sales have been completed, 50:50 owners Aquila and Vale have not been able to sell coal since November without the threat of either side taking legal action.
As a result, stockpiles of coal have mounted and Aquila has warned they would soon reach their limit if shipments did not resume, forcing the mine to shut. Vale could not be immediately reached for comment.
Mr Steve Badenhorst director of Vale's Australian coal operations in told Reuters that Vale was prepared to expand the capacity to stockpile coal if needed.
The dispute quickly emerged over the ability of Aquila and Vale to take their separate shares of coal from the mine and utilize port and rail capacity contracts.
The two companies have also been at odds over the price Vale will pay for exercising its option to buy Aquila's 24.5% interest in the separate Belvedere coal mine, which Aquila estimates will cost AUD 2.8 billion to develop.
Vale holds 75.5% and said a year ago it planned to buy Aquila's interest at fair market value.
(Sourced from Reuters)
Friday, July 15, 2011
Vale dispute led to 200000 tonnes of cancelled shipments - Aquila
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