Neustart: Greenland Minerals darf loslegen
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Greenland ging Freitag auch bei uns durch die Decke (+ 64 %), nachdem die grönländische Regierung erlaubte, auch Uran zu Fördern.
Das beste:
The Kvanefjeld (Kvanefjeld is an emerging multi-element deposit hosted within marginal phases of the Ilimaussaq Intrusive Complex, located near the southwest tip of Greenland. The deposit is exposed at surface along a series of undulating bluffs on a broad peninsula surrounded by deepwater fjords that run directly out to the Atlantic Ocean. Greenland Minerals and Energy acquired the project in mid-2007 and immediately launched a field program that included airborne radiometric and magnetic surveys, environmental studies, geological investigations and a 10,000m diamond drill program
-http://www.ggg.gl/Projects/Kvanefjeld-Project-Greenland.htm- ) deposit has enough uranium alone to pay for the cost of the mine, with all revenue from rare earths marked as profit. The company said it would be the biggest rare earths mine outside of China.
Mcillree said the decision allows it to start a feasibility study in 2011 to develop a mine plan
10/09/2010 Positive policy change for Kvanefjeld
Greenland Eases Uranium-Mining Ban, Gives Nod To Australian Company Greenland's government Thursday partially changed a decades-old ban on uranium mining in one of its most significant acts since gaining limited autonomy from Denmark a year ago. The move could open the icebound and sparsely populated country to exploration for uranium and rare earths and gives a nod to an Australian mining company to develop a mine plan for what the company says is the world's biggest undeveloped deposit of rare earths.
Months of intense debate within the country and negotiations with mining companies preceded the decision as the government sought to balance environmental concerns with the need for revenue to wean Greenland off Danish aid, a necessary step towards achieving full independence. In its decision, Greenland's government amended the terms of its exploration licensing to allow for the exploration of radioactive elements such as uranium and thorium on a case-by-case basis, said Lars Emil Johansen, a former prime minister of Greenland who is chairman of Australian mining company Greenland Minerals & Energy Ltd.'s (GGG.AU) local subsidiary. "We just got the information that the government has made a decision to change the uranium mining policy," he said. "It's not permission to start mining, but it is permission to make studies for mines with uranium. It's a very big step forward for the company." Government officials were unavailable for comment. A press release in Greenlandic has been issued. The amendment is a reversal to the zero-tolerance policy that was instituted in the 1980s. The government is still conducting a full review of mining radioactive elements, which is expected to produce a broader decision on mining. The ban's removal brings immediate benefits to Greenland Minerals & Energy, which owns 61% of the uranium-rare earth deposit Kvanefjeld in southwest Greenland. Under the ban, the company was unable to develop and mine the rare earths deposit because of its uranium content. But concurrent with Thursday's decision, Greenland's government approved an updated exploration license for Greenland Minerals that will allow it to develop a mine plan for both rare earths and uranium at the Kvanefjeld deposit. The company will still need to obtain a license to mine the deposit after developing a mine plan. The Australian mining company said Kvanefjeld is the world's second-largest rare earths deposit and the sixth-largest uranium deposit. A prefeasibility study estimates the mine can produce 43,729 metric tons of rare earths oxides and 3,895 tons of uranium a year during a 23-year lifespan. Rare earths are a small group of metals that are almost all produced in China. Their increasing use in green technologies and military applications combined with China's monopoly of supply have prompted the European Union and the U.S. to declare them strategic metals. If the company satisfies the government's health, safety and environmental requirements after a feasibility study, an exploitation license can be issued to build a mine, said Greenland Minerals & Energy Managing Director Rod Mcillree. The Kvanefjeld deposit has enough uranium alone to pay for the cost of the mine, with all revenue from rare earths marked as profit. The company said it would be the biggest rare earths mine outside of China. Mcillree said the decision allows it to start a feasibility study in 2011 to develop a mine plan. Greenland Minerals & Energy's shares have been suspended from trading since Aug. 3 pending the talks with the government. Greenland's decision to open the country to uranium mining comes at the start of an exploration boom for minerals, oil and gas that has raised the hopes of resource companies but has sparked environmental concerns for Greenland's fragile Arctic ecosystem. London-listed Cairn Energy PLC (CNE.LN), which this summer is carrying out its first drilling campaign off the west coast of Greenland, last month said initial results were "encouraging." But its drilling has attracted the attention of environmentalists and the Canadian government. Greenpeace activists last month climbed aboard a Cairn oil rig to protest exploration in the Arctic. The Canadian government has expressed concerns that an oil spill would be difficult to control in Greenland's short open-water season and could reach Canada's nearby coastline. The government installed an inspector in Greenland in June to monitor Cairn's drilling campaign. -By Matthew Walls, Dow Jones Newswires;
hier noch das ASX-Release: 10/09/2010 Positive policy change for Kvanefjeld http://www.asx.com.au/asxpdf/20100910/pdf/31sfhrnt2vmmpv.pdf ...
25 July 2022
25 July 2022 Market Announcement 1/1 ASX Limited ASX Customer Service Centre 131 279 | asx.com.au
Greenland Minerals Limited (ASX: GGG) – Trading Halt
Description
The securities of Greenland Minerals Limited (‘GGG’) will be placed in trading halt at the request of GGG, pending it releasing an announcement. Unless ASX decides otherwise, the securities will remain in trading halt until the earlier of the commencement of normal trading on Wednesday, 27 July 2022 or when the announcement is released to the market.
Issued by Sean Maloney Senior Adviser, Listings Compliance (Perth)
https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/...on-on-rare-earth-license.6859768/
Hinzu kommt, neben der nun erklärten Klage, noch das schon bekannte Schiedsgerichts Verfahren im September.
Außerdem komplexe politische Auseinandersetzung bezüglich Kvanefjeld:
Die Opposition und Regierungsparteien sind sich scheinbar auch untereinander nicht einig:
"Pele Broberg will ein Referendum über Uran. Die Uranfrage sollte nicht bestimmen, wo die Wähler ihre Stimme für das Inatsisart-Komitee abgeben. Deshalb muss die Bevölkerung in einem Richtreferendum direkt angehört werden, ob sie für Naleraq ist, der mit einem Gesetzentwurf für die Herbstversammlung bereitsteht.
Der Vorsitzende von Naleraq, Pele Broberg, ist bereit für ein indikatives Referendum über Uran im nächsten Jahr. Deshalb hat er einen Gesetzentwurf zur Vernehmlassung geschickt.
Der Vorschlag sieht vor, am 4. April 2023 ein indikatives Referendum über die Aufhebung des Inatsisartutlov über das Verbot von Voruntersuchungen, Forschung und Gewinnung von Uran usw. abzuhalten.
..."
https://hotcopper.com.au/threads/...anium-ban-bill-next-year.6855599/
Übersetzen
Die Grünen haben die Wahl in Grönland gewonnen und sie haben nein zum Uranabbau gesagt. Jetzt deutet sich eine Volksbefragung im Frühjahr 2023 an. Die Mehrheit wird ja sagen und die kleine Gruppe um das Abbaugebiet nein. Unterm Strich wird ein Ja rauskommen. Die grünen Politiker haben ein sauberes Händchen nun. So geht Politik heutzutage.
Meine Meinung dazu. Was sagt ihr???
Bitte hier melden!
Solang kann ich auch noch warten. Bin am überlegen bis dahin Malle oder Monaco?! Obwohl Lloret de Mar ist auch gut!!!
Adios Freunde des vielen Geldes
Mit freundlichen Grüßen
Grönlandischer Prime Minister Múte B. Egede
https://www.wilsoncenter.org/event/...and-prime-minister-mute-b-egede
Die Chance ist also immer noch groß, dass sich eine Lösung finden wird. Insbesondere die Intensität der befürchteten Strahlwirkungen (WG. Uranabbau) sollen eigentlich nur geringfügig über der natürlichen Grundstrahlung liegen, so dass ökonomische Interessen den Vorang bekommen könnten.
https://wcsecure.weblink.com.au/Clients/GGG/V2/...headlineid=61105460
Mark Stephan Saxon hat langjährige Erfahrung, d.h. er ist nicht billig und wird nicht auf einem "sinkenden Schiff" anheuern bzw. angeheuert werden.
https://www.linkedin.com/in/mark-saxon-mineral-exploration