Showing posts with label Barrick Gold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Barrick Gold. Show all posts
Monday, February 29, 2016
Sunday, June 9, 2013
Barrick Gold’s Perfect Storm Peter Munk on Resource Nationalism and the Changing Global Paradigm
The origin of problems according to Barrick Gold
Barrick Gold’s Perfect Storm Peter Munk on Resource Nationalism and the Changing Global Paradigm“Please understand” … pleaded Peter Munk several times to shareholdersgathered in Toronto on April 24th for Barrick’s annual shareholdermeeting (AGM) as he laid out the reasons why Barrick Gold has lost nearly three-fourths of its company value, why projects are being closed due toenvironmental contamination, and why all of a sudden gold, and Barrick Gold stock in particular, doesn’t look so attractive. The speech is a revelation of what really drives the gold miningindustry and one of the most controversial industry leaders in particular.
Munk was clearly referring to Pascua Lama, the multi-billion dollar goldproject on the Argentine-Chilean border that has become a constant headache forBarrick Gold. The project is riddled with environmental problems and unpredictedand escalating costs, and suffered as a result of the collapse of the financingscheme Barrick hoped to build with subsidized public money from EDC (Canada)and EXIM bank (USA). Today, the mine remains closed in Chile for failure tocomply with environmental regulations. Barrick’s legal appeals have had noinfluence on the Chilean authorities.
A year ago today, Munk boasted that the fundamentals were brilliant.Barrick was on the verge of launching two of the most spectacularly unique goldmines, Pascua Lama in Argentina/Chile and Pueblo Viejo in the DominicanRepublic. Both projects would be characterized by exceptional production, longlife, and some of the lowest average operating costs per ounce. This yearthough, Munk was reduced to asking, “What can I say to you? ...The fundamental stoday could not be more different than they were a mere twelve months ago. Our two mines are both in trouble”. (AGM Speech: Minutes 43:00-44:00)
At both Pascua Lama and Pueblo Viejo, Barrick has run into significant problems.Munk attributed this to growing resource nationalism, which he referred to numerous times throughout his speech. He says it’s a global phenomenon and the underlying characteristic of the new mining paradigm.
He posed the following hypothetical situation to the audience: “You’rethe new president of a small Latin American country… You have two choices, keepon taxing the people… or go after that big multinational huge globalcorporation with billions of dollars of assets. … This is totally understandable, it is the essence of this enormously rapidly growing resource nationalism… It is the ultimate threat to the very lifeline of the mining industry, which ultimately will cause an enormous spike in commodity prices. (Minutes46:00 - 47:00)
He pointedto leaders such as Hugo Chavez of Venezuela and Evo Morales of Bolivia … suggesting that “there’s a whole slew of new modern populist leaders that may not follow the rule of law as we expect them to do”. (Minute 48:00)
While never explicitly stated, it was clear that his critiques were no tso much about Chavez and Morales, but rather referred to his frustration with Argentina and Dominican republic
Ironically, the venting and frustration over host government rule-bendingquickly vanished when Munk came to the issue of executive pay. There, Munk pointed to the impressive CV of newCo-Chairman John Thorton, former Goldman Sachs chief, as a justification for awhopping US$11.9 million pay package from the gold giant to have Thorton takeover Barrick, which has dropped in value by nearly 75% since its recent marketpeak.
In his closing comments, Peter Munk reached out to the essence of whatsustains the gold industry. Companies mine, process and sell gold not forsocial or economic development, not for social progress and not for the benefitof the needy or the poor communities in the countries where Barrick Gold isinvested
So, the conclusion of BG speech:
- Dominican president is as radical and keep the same political lines of as Chavez and Morales
- The most important mines of BG are Pascua lama and Pueblo viejo have a populist leader that "dont follow the rules of law"
- BG always follow the rules of law
- BG is not in DR for social progress or the needy poor communities of Cotui.
- BG never mention pollution, smuggling cyanide, fines, etc so all those "rumors" are probably a lie
- Barrick Gold has lost nearly three-fourths of its company value, shareholders are VERY scare
- It's ok to pay somebody a bonus of $11.9 millions made from dominican gold , but not a single dime yet to dominican people
source: www.gowebcasting.com/events/barrick/2013/04/24/2013-annual-meeting-of-shareholders/play/stream/7102
These are the personal words of BG president Peter Munk in the last shareholder meeting..
Personally I am speechless ..
You make your own conclusions..
Labels:
Barrick,
Barrick Gold,
claims,
contaminacion,
Cotui,
customs,
cyanide,
dile no a la Barrick,
Dominican Republic,
law,
mine,
mineria,
mines,
Peter Munk,
reforestation,
Santo Domingo,
say no to Barrick gold,
scam
Saturday, June 8, 2013
Barrick Gold sticks to its claim over limestone shipment

Santo Domingo.- Barrick Gold Corp. on Friday said the shipping manifest filed with the Customs Agency on the six tanks retained for nearly a month are in fact, limestone originally from Portugal worth only 50 dollars.
But Customs technicians said the cargo was shipped from the mine at Pueblo Viejo, Cotuí, a week after Barrick Gold and the Government signed the new agreement
An elnacional.com.do sources revealed that the mining company sought to ship the cargo to Canada, this time with a courier not the usual commercial carrier.
It said the company roused suspicions when it transported the six tanks to Punta Caucedo freight terminal’s Warehouse 10, instead of the customary Warehouse 3.
Another attitude which the source says spurred suspicion is that the company at no time demanded that Customs return the tanks which allegedly contain limestone.
They said the shipment would’ve been sent one week after signing the new contract, "the company still used tricks in the extraction of gold and silver, seeking to circumvent the payment of taxes."
Barrick Gold reportedly set the value of the limestone at 50 dollars, even though a shipping company would’ve charged more than $7,000 to ship it to Canada.
Barrick Gold set the value of the limestone at 50 dollars from Portugal?
The shipping company would’ve charged more than $7,000 to ship it to Canada.?
The limestone was coming directly from Pueblo Viejo mine?
Something smells very funny there..
Just the manner of declaring the commodity worth $50 is a slap in the face.
Barricks actions moving the limestone originating from Portugal, subsequently arriving in the RD, and then manifiested to Canada is a de facto declaration of a special utility which adds value to the product.
¿ Is it worth the expense to ship ? Barrick thinks so.
Note: Gold is found in limestone deposits. Could it be the limestone was sent to Barrick in the RD for analysis ?
The actions by Barrick It do not pass the smell test.
Barrick's share holders have not gotten a whiff of it yet.
Monday, June 3, 2013
Barrick Gold in Chile: ‘We regret environmental problems, we’ll comply’
Barrick Gold in Chile will comply in enviromental issues, not in Dominican Republic

Canadian mining company Barrick Gold Corporation said today that it will comply with the details of the resolution of Chile's Superintendent for the Environment (SMA) in which the authority fined the company US$ 16.4 million.
As Digital Journal reported earlier today, Chile’s SMA announced a fine of about 16,4 million dollars to Barrick Gold for violating several regulations and environmental compliance resolutions. Additionally, the authority instructed Barrick Gold to stop construction activities at the Pascua Lama project until contaminated water management systems could be implemented in the manner provided in the Environmental Qualification Resolution that approved the operations, but the company had failed to put in place.

Today the company issued a statement saying it will build temporary structures to gather, transport and discharge water into a settling basin north of the mine and will monitor the environmental variables affected by the operation which threaten Andean glaciers very important to local indigenous Diaguita communities.
""We deeply regret that Pascua Lama has suffered difficulties in its construction and we will endeavor to rectify the problems and meet the terms of the approved project. We are respectful of the institutions of the countries in which we operate, and consequently, we will act according to the resolution."" said Eduardo Flores Zelaya, president of Barrick Gold South America, and Senior VP of Pascua Lama, according to LaTercera (in Spanish).

Furthermore, the company’s website posted a declaration which includes the following statement: ""Barrick is fully committed to complying with all aspects of the resolution and to operating at the highest environmental standards." "

After reading this ,,we ask our self several questions:
How come they were can comply in Chile and Nevada but not in Dom. Rep. ?
How come that nobody says nothing either?
Why the Dominican government is not forcing them to comply with environmental issues in the last "happy agreement"?
Why they didn't talk about reforestation, jobs for the poor people in the area , water treatment facilities,hospitals for the people that eventually will get sick, etc?
How come that the Dominican government haven't seen a dime yet?
Now we certainly have more questions than answers..
Canadian mining company Barrick Gold Corporation said today that it will comply with the details of the resolution of Chile's Superintendent for the Environment (SMA) in which the authority fined the company US$ 16.4 million.
As Digital Journal reported earlier today, Chile’s SMA announced a fine of about 16,4 million dollars to Barrick Gold for violating several regulations and environmental compliance resolutions. Additionally, the authority instructed Barrick Gold to stop construction activities at the Pascua Lama project until contaminated water management systems could be implemented in the manner provided in the Environmental Qualification Resolution that approved the operations, but the company had failed to put in place.
Today the company issued a statement saying it will build temporary structures to gather, transport and discharge water into a settling basin north of the mine and will monitor the environmental variables affected by the operation which threaten Andean glaciers very important to local indigenous Diaguita communities.
""We deeply regret that Pascua Lama has suffered difficulties in its construction and we will endeavor to rectify the problems and meet the terms of the approved project. We are respectful of the institutions of the countries in which we operate, and consequently, we will act according to the resolution."" said Eduardo Flores Zelaya, president of Barrick Gold South America, and Senior VP of Pascua Lama, according to LaTercera (in Spanish).
Furthermore, the company’s website posted a declaration which includes the following statement: ""Barrick is fully committed to complying with all aspects of the resolution and to operating at the highest environmental standards." "
After reading this ,,we ask our self several questions:
How come they were can comply in Chile and Nevada but not in Dom. Rep. ?
How come that nobody says nothing either?
Why the Dominican government is not forcing them to comply with environmental issues in the last "happy agreement"?
Why they didn't talk about reforestation, jobs for the poor people in the area , water treatment facilities,hospitals for the people that eventually will get sick, etc?
How come that the Dominican government haven't seen a dime yet?
Now we certainly have more questions than answers..
Labels:
Barrick Gold,
cianuro,
contaminacion,
contaminated rivers,
contamination,
law,
led,
mine,
mineria,
mines,
mining,
reforestation,
Republica Dominicana,
Santo Domingo,
say no to Barrick gold
Saturday, June 1, 2013
Barrick agrees to pay fine to Chileans, nothing to Dominicans
Barrick Gold pays $11.6-million Pascua-Lama fine ...
Santiago — Reuters
Published Friday, May. 31 2013, 6:30 PM EDT

Barrick Gold Corp. has paid a discounted $11.6-million (U.S.) fine for serious environmental violations at its suspended Pascua-Lama gold project, a spokesperson for the company said on Friday.
Last Friday, Chile’s new environmental regulator ordered the controversial $8.5-billion project be halted and fined the world’s biggest gold miner around $16-million.
Chile’s President says Barrick Gold Corp. must follow 23 steps to comply with orders from his country’s environmental regulator, a message that underscores the tough road ahead for the company to get its crucial Pascua-Lama gold project back on track.
Sebastian Pinera, in Ottawa to discuss Canada-Chile economic relations, admonished Barrick for its handling of the $8.5-billion (U.S.) mine development so far.

So, let me see If I understand:
Nobody is going to do nothing? Nobody is going to say nothing either?What the hell I am missing over here?
Santiago — Reuters
Published Friday, May. 31 2013, 6:30 PM EDT
Barrick Gold Corp. has paid a discounted $11.6-million (U.S.) fine for serious environmental violations at its suspended Pascua-Lama gold project, a spokesperson for the company said on Friday.
Last Friday, Chile’s new environmental regulator ordered the controversial $8.5-billion project be halted and fined the world’s biggest gold miner around $16-million.
Chile’s President says Barrick Gold Corp. must follow 23 steps to comply with orders from his country’s environmental regulator, a message that underscores the tough road ahead for the company to get its crucial Pascua-Lama gold project back on track.
Sebastian Pinera, in Ottawa to discuss Canada-Chile economic relations, admonished Barrick for its handling of the $8.5-billion (U.S.) mine development so far.
So, let me see If I understand:
- Barrick Gold agree to pay to Chile the fine ( nothing to the Dominican counterparts)
- No foreign investment run away of Chile because of the fine
- The did have resources to pay a fine , despite what their executives were saying recently
- Dominicans haven't seen a dime yet after the famous agreement
- Barrick Gold will keep polluting the environment, the rivers, dams and air with tons of cyanide and mercury as they always do everywhere in the world...
- We, Dominicans , are the most naive human beings on planet Earth
Nobody is going to do nothing? Nobody is going to say nothing either?What the hell I am missing over here?
Friday, May 31, 2013
Unfinished business
The Barrick Gold issue

Everyone is happy about the big agreement of the Dominican government with Barrick Gold related to Pueblo Viejo Gold mine in Cotui, but there are certain issues not finished yet..
In a press conference after a meeting of several hours between senior officials and Barrick Gold executives in the National Palace, the government announced the pact to amend the contract, to be submitted to Congress as soon as possible.
Among other points, the agreement will raise Government revenue by more than US$1.5 billion over the project's duration, in addition to the US$10.0 billion projected in March 2013, and raises the profit split from 37.1% to 51.3 % for the country, and lowers Barrick’s from 62.9% to 48.7%
Everything looks clear in the agreement..except for a couple of things:

2000 years later..I still hearing Jesus saying, "Father, forgive them, for they don't know what they are doing. .
Everyone is happy about the big agreement of the Dominican government with Barrick Gold related to Pueblo Viejo Gold mine in Cotui, but there are certain issues not finished yet..
In a press conference after a meeting of several hours between senior officials and Barrick Gold executives in the National Palace, the government announced the pact to amend the contract, to be submitted to Congress as soon as possible.
Among other points, the agreement will raise Government revenue by more than US$1.5 billion over the project's duration, in addition to the US$10.0 billion projected in March 2013, and raises the profit split from 37.1% to 51.3 % for the country, and lowers Barrick’s from 62.9% to 48.7%
Everything looks clear in the agreement..except for a couple of things:
- We haven't seen a dime yet..
- We haven't get clear what is going to happens with the millions in fines of BG that they already owe to the Dominican state.. ..
Do BG have any plan to employ Dominican people instead of bringing more peruvians?
- What is going to happens with the cyanide and mercury? How are they going to clean that mess?
- What is going to happens with the crops of cocoa beans, coffee beans and fishing infrastructure that we had before..? Any reforestation plans either?
- Did anybody realize that we are pushing for more marginality of Dominican people by allowing the eviction of 600 families?
- So far, instead of bringing prosperity to Cotui area, BG only brought misery , illness, cyanide, evictions, and poverty..
What the government, in charge of protecting its people ,is going to do about it?
- Is there any plan study to analyze the horrendous environmental consequences of Barrick Gold in DR?
2000 years later..I still hearing Jesus saying, "Father, forgive them, for they don't know what they are doing. .
Tuesday, May 28, 2013
Barrick Gold to seal reviewed Dominican mine contract next week
Santo Domingo.- Several senior executives of Barrick Gold Corp. will visit the country in the next few weeks to endorse the contract renegotiated with the Dominican Government.
The announcement comes two weeks after Barrick Gold capitulated before president Danilo Medina’s stern warning to review the gold mining contract to give the country a faire share of the income.
Once the preliminary agreement signed May 8 is ratified, it would be submitted to Congress, which is expected to approve the amendment.
The government officials who participated in the talks to rewrite the contract for the mine at Pueblo Viejo (northeast) have continued holding meetings to hammer out some details.
A source quoted by hoy.com.do said despite the announced preliminary agreement, it’s a complex negotiations involving several new financial aspects, especially for the Canadian miner.
The source also notes that while gold’s price of US$1,600 an ounce was used as the reference in the renegotiation, what should be done regarding its current downward trend must still be established.
________________________________________________________________________
The source didn't mention that BG keeps the same operational cost as it was in 2008, so it keeps a VERY good deal for BG.
The conversation of BG and the government were about the financial issues.They haven't talk about pollution, eviction ,unemployment, cleaning the cyanide and mercury from the rivers and dams, , water treatment program , health issue, dead crops and what are they going to do with the 600 families they left without water in that area.
The situation now is unbearable for those people living in the second poorest area of Dominican republic
The government was supposed to be protecting their people. So far it seems like another scam to me.
Time to be good Dominicans and support our brothers and sisters in that deprived area.We need to be proactive and keep our natural resources.
Time to say no to Barrick Gold !
Labels:
Barrick Gold,
cianuro,
contaminacion,
contaminated rivers,
Cotui,
cyanide,
dile no a la Barrick,
Dominican Republic,
mine,
mineria,
mines,
mining,
pollution,
reforestation,
say no to Barrick gold,
scam
Sunday, May 26, 2013
Barrick Gold Fined $16M For Environmental Problems At $5B Pascua Lama Project In Chile
Chile blocks Barrick Gold mining project
Diaguita Indians celebrate victory in seeing mining giant Barrick Gold Corporation fined for environmental violation.

More
bad news for some embattled gold miners. On Friday, Barrick Gold was
halted around noon in New York as reports surfaced indicating the
Chilean government had forced the company to “paralyze” its operations
in Pascua Lama, one of the largest gold and silver resources in the
world into which Barrick has poured nearly $5 billion in. Silver
Wheaton , a joint-venture partner in the project, was halted a few
minutes later.
According to Chilean daily El Mercurio, Barrick
will be fined about 8 billion Chilean pesos, or $16.4 million, given the
company’s failure to comply with environmental regulation. Beyond the
fine, Chile’s Superintendent for the Environment, Juan Carlos Monckeberg
Fernandez, has established that all construction activity at Pascua
Lama must stop immediately.

The
Pascua Lama project is located in the Andes Mountains, between Chile
and Argentina. Barrick had already announced its operations in Chile
were halted in its latest earnings release, as the company was assessing
environmental and regulatory requirements, while negotiating with a
court of appeals. Barrick has invested nearly $5 billion in Pascua
Lima, which holds almost 18 million ounces of proven and probable gold
reserves and 676 million ounces of silver.

The
main problem appears to be the water management systems at Pascua Lama,
El Mercurio reported. The open-pit mining project has the potential to
contaminate water in the area, and according to the Chilean government,
Barrick hasn’t taken the proper precautions, precautions it had agreed
to previously.
It hasn’t been a good year for gold, or anything
related to it. Major mining companies have all suffered steep stock
price declines. Barrick Gold is among the worst performers, down more
than 40% in 2013, but others like Newmont Mining NEM -0.78% and Goldcorp
are also well in the red, down more than 20% each. Gold prices have
also taken a beating, with bullion currently trading below $1,400 an
ounce.
Diaguita people
People from the Diaguita indigenous group whose community lives
downstream from the mine allege that their water supply and glaciers
have been contaminated by the construction work.
The Diaguita people who live in small towns along rivers that flow down from the mine were feeling a sense of victory on Friday.
"Even though we seem so small, we could beat Barrick, which is a giant," said one community member Osvaldina Guzman Villegas.
______________________________________
Barrick Gold couldn't fix the contamination issue in Chile, so they lost their mine.Now we are having the same issue in Dominican Republic, but in way worst situation because we are a way smaller country that can not hold so much cyanide, mercury and led.
We need to take care of our people as well, specially the ones that lives in the small towns along the rivers of Cotui.
Eventually we are becoming the Chernobyl of the Caribbean.
The question is: Is BG REALLY trying to stop the pollution in DR?
Labels:
Argentina,
Barrick Gold,
Chile,
cianuro,
claims,
contaminacion,
contaminated rivers,
contamination,
cyanide,
dile no a la Barrick,
dusting,
led,
mine,
mineria,
mines,
Republica Dominicana,
Santo Domingo
Friday, May 24, 2013
Nixed nickel mine is Dominican environmentalists’ 3rd major victory
Santo Domingo.- In the heels of the United Nations Development Program’s (UNDP) report that Xstrata Nickel Falcondo’s plan to mine Loma Miranda isn’t feasible, civil society groups were quick to demand its designation as a National Park.

The report against the planned mine marks the third major victory for the country’s environmental movement, after the ban on development of the Bahia de las Aguilas beach, and the construction of a cement plant near the Los Haitises National Park.
The UNDP said of evaluation of the environmental impact assessment by the firm, said the Falcondo’s project neither meets environmental, social nor sustainable development requirements.
In a press conference Thursday, UNDP officials headed by country representative Valerie Julliand listed the deficiencies found in the Falcondo study, noting that the miner didn’t take into account the growth in water consumption nor an analysis on the project’s impact on rivers. "Given the deficiencies in the environmental impact study, it’s concluded that the Loma Miranda project doesn’t meet the environmental and social requirements and therefore, the country’s sustainable development."
The UNDP official said relevant issues were omitted, such as ecosystem services and risk, and were considered only those relating to mining activity and not those of social biophysics.
Technology
The report notes that aside from those considerations, Falcondo did submit a novel project with new mining technologies in areas of sediment and runoff management and the reforestation process in the affected areas.
Academy of Sciences
Dominican Republic Academy of Sciences president Miltiades Mejia said once again its technicians showed they possess the knowledge to express objections on topics such as Loma Miranda, when they called the project as unsustainable and counterproductive while taking into account the population’s views.
"Our proposal today is to designate Loma Miranda a National Park and ask Environment minister Bautista Rojas to enforce Law 64-00 in the case of Xstrata Nickel’s operation, to start restoring the mined areas, as the Law stipulates," Mejia said.
Bonao supports
The Bonao City Council yesterday issued a resolution to support the city of La Vega’s demand that Congress declare Loma Miranda a protected area, according to a proposal submitted by Senator Euclides Sanchez.
Falconbridge willing to dialogue and to improve
Meanwhile Xstrata Nickel Falcondo said it would carefully analyze the UNDP’s report on mining viability of its project near La Vega.
Conclusion
So far it's a great achievement by the Dominican society to stop this private sector threat, but people haven't stop thinking about the environmental impact of having Barrick Gold pouring tons of cyanide on the tiny island of Santo Domingo and the impact of the wild life, the crops and the human being living there.
Everything is happening little by little in front of our noses, till it would be to late.
The situation in DR will be simply unbearable.
It will be like having a major atomic dirty bomb in the middle of the island, with a complete devastation and deadly chemical and mineral pollution everywhere.
People is waiting for a report of the department of public health and what are they going to do about it.
It's time to preserve our legacy and national patrimony .
It's time to learn the repercussions and to be aware of the great danger that we have as a nation Cyanide pollution could be lethal..We need to stop them!
We need to put our grain of sand for our future generations..
Let's do it!
Labels:
Barrick Gold,
cianuro,
contaminacion,
contaminated rivers,
contamination,
Cotui,
cyanide,
dile no a la Barrick,
Dominican Republic,
loma miranda,
mineria,
mines,
mining,
Santo Domingo,
Xstrata
Thursday, May 23, 2013
Organizations keep claiming 5% of the benefits from the Barrick
About 106 organization of Cotui demanded 5% of the benefits from the Barrick Gold
They deposit yesterday a document in the Palacio Nacional with their claims

Santo Domingo.Representation of 106 organizations and unions of Sanchez Ramirez deposit yesterday a document in the National Palace about their position of what they understand should be included in the agreement between the government and the Barrick Gold
Between the issues they want the 5% of the benefits of the exploitations , an improvement over the the environment issue, they want to have an open union of Barrick employees,warranty for the supervision, accounting and transportation of the production, and that the dominican state should have more control, between different issues.
Óscar Pérez Núñez,speaker of the group say they were concern because in the agreement signed between the government and Barrick Gold they barely mention the people from Cotui affected by the mining company
He mention that after the beginning of the exploitation, Cotui is suffering from a big pollution, situation that make people get sick with fever, vomit and diarrhea.
They deposit yesterday a document in the Palacio Nacional with their claims
Santo Domingo.Representation of 106 organizations and unions of Sanchez Ramirez deposit yesterday a document in the National Palace about their position of what they understand should be included in the agreement between the government and the Barrick Gold
Between the issues they want the 5% of the benefits of the exploitations , an improvement over the the environment issue, they want to have an open union of Barrick employees,warranty for the supervision, accounting and transportation of the production, and that the dominican state should have more control, between different issues.
Óscar Pérez Núñez,speaker of the group say they were concern because in the agreement signed between the government and Barrick Gold they barely mention the people from Cotui affected by the mining company
He mention that after the beginning of the exploitation, Cotui is suffering from a big pollution, situation that make people get sick with fever, vomit and diarrhea.
Pérez Núñez said that they are thinking leaving the province and everything behind due to the high contamination int the area
Pérez Núñez, mention in the letter, addressed to the president Danilo Medina, they suggest to give Cotui a 5% of the resources for an institution that would be concern with the problems of the province of Sanchez Ramirez

We have mention this before, over and over.. And people haven't pay attention of some of the inner problems of the community: health, contamination, employment ,water, clean environment,etc.
These affected communities is going to be a reflection of what is going to happens to the rest of the Dominicans.
We can keep talking , and Barrick gold keep taking gold out of DR,we keep their cyanide and mercury and we haven't seen a penny yet of BG.
Somehow, this drama remind me the biggest claim of Jerry Maguire: Show me the money
it's like a never ending situation with BG, when some people come from over seas assuming how naive are Dominicans, while they keep taking the gold away, over and over and over again.
Pérez Núñez, mention in the letter, addressed to the president Danilo Medina, they suggest to give Cotui a 5% of the resources for an institution that would be concern with the problems of the province of Sanchez Ramirez
We have mention this before, over and over.. And people haven't pay attention of some of the inner problems of the community: health, contamination, employment ,water, clean environment,etc.
These affected communities is going to be a reflection of what is going to happens to the rest of the Dominicans.
We can keep talking , and Barrick gold keep taking gold out of DR,we keep their cyanide and mercury and we haven't seen a penny yet of BG.
Somehow, this drama remind me the biggest claim of Jerry Maguire: Show me the money
it's like a never ending situation with BG, when some people come from over seas assuming how naive are Dominicans, while they keep taking the gold away, over and over and over again.
Is there something that we don't know yet?
Labels:
Barrick Gold,
cianuro,
claims,
contaminacion,
contaminated rivers,
contamination,
Cotui,
dile no a la Barrick,
Dominican Republic,
history of barrick gold,
pollution,
presa,
Santo Domingo
Wednesday, May 22, 2013
Barrick Gold weighs fewer mines
Barrick Gold weighs fewer mines

New York - Barrick Gold, the biggest miner of the metal by sales, is considering shrinking in size as the company focuses on returns over production volumes, chief executive Jamie Sokalsky said.
“Being more profitable is better than being bigger,” Sokalsky said yesterday at the Bloomberg Canada Economic Summit in Toronto.
“If we divested of some of those smaller, higher-cost assets and came down to a suite of assets that are long-lived and lower-cost and more valuable, I think that ultimately that can be a better investment proposition.”
Gold producers are trading at their cheapest in more than a decade relative to the broader market, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, as investors flee the industry amid rising mining costs, project delays and asset writedowns.
Sokalsky, who took over as chief executive of the Toronto-based company 11 months ago, is reviewing growth plans and pursuing asset sales as gold trades at a two-year low and is poised to end a rally that has extended for 12 straight years.
Barrick, the owner or part owner of 27 mines, rose 4.3 percent yesterday to C$19.88 in Toronto.
The company closed at a two-decade low on April 17, losing its position as the top gold miner by market value to Vancouver-based Goldcorp Inc last month.
It makes sense for Barrick to shrink, said George Topping, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus in Toronto.
Selling the company’s Australian assets would be “a good place to start,” he said.
Barrick is working with Bank of America Corp. and UBS AG on a possible sale of Australian mines, two people with knowledge of the matter said last month.
Resource Nationalism
“At the 8 million-ounce level, with 26 or so mines it’s very difficult to focus,” Topping said yesterday by phone.
“In order to have better managerial control you’re better off with fewer but much larger assets, preferably in the same north-south time zones.”
It’s easier to manage a company with fewer assets, said Sokalsky, 55.
The location of mines has also taken on a greater importance because of an increase in so-called resource nationalism, in which governments seek a bigger slice of revenue.
After a dispute with the Dominican Republic, Toronto- based Barrick on May 8 agreed to amend a lease governing the Pueblo Viejo mine in the country.

The conclusions:
Event though a lot of people are happy with the financial agreement with BG, some of the inner needs of a lot of Dominicans haven't been fulfill yet like health, employment,heavy pollution,evictions, housing, water, etc, etc.
People is still waiting..

New York - Barrick Gold, the biggest miner of the metal by sales, is considering shrinking in size as the company focuses on returns over production volumes, chief executive Jamie Sokalsky said.
“Being more profitable is better than being bigger,” Sokalsky said yesterday at the Bloomberg Canada Economic Summit in Toronto.
“If we divested of some of those smaller, higher-cost assets and came down to a suite of assets that are long-lived and lower-cost and more valuable, I think that ultimately that can be a better investment proposition.”
Gold producers are trading at their cheapest in more than a decade relative to the broader market, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, as investors flee the industry amid rising mining costs, project delays and asset writedowns.
Sokalsky, who took over as chief executive of the Toronto-based company 11 months ago, is reviewing growth plans and pursuing asset sales as gold trades at a two-year low and is poised to end a rally that has extended for 12 straight years.
Barrick, the owner or part owner of 27 mines, rose 4.3 percent yesterday to C$19.88 in Toronto.
The company closed at a two-decade low on April 17, losing its position as the top gold miner by market value to Vancouver-based Goldcorp Inc last month.
It makes sense for Barrick to shrink, said George Topping, an analyst at Stifel Nicolaus in Toronto.
Selling the company’s Australian assets would be “a good place to start,” he said.
Barrick is working with Bank of America Corp. and UBS AG on a possible sale of Australian mines, two people with knowledge of the matter said last month.
Resource Nationalism
“At the 8 million-ounce level, with 26 or so mines it’s very difficult to focus,” Topping said yesterday by phone.
“In order to have better managerial control you’re better off with fewer but much larger assets, preferably in the same north-south time zones.”
It’s easier to manage a company with fewer assets, said Sokalsky, 55.
The location of mines has also taken on a greater importance because of an increase in so-called resource nationalism, in which governments seek a bigger slice of revenue.
After a dispute with the Dominican Republic, Toronto- based Barrick on May 8 agreed to amend a lease governing the Pueblo Viejo mine in the country.
The conclusions:
- BG had the pressure on after loosing Pascua lama (Chile Argentina)
- BG lost the mines of Tanzania and China last years
- BG is going to fire sell the Australian mine
- The importance of Pueblo Viejo mine is HUMONGOUS for BG assets
- The rules of the game for pollution had changed for good in affected countries
- These news have affected the price of Barrick Gold stock (ABX) , therefor , their market capitalization.ABX is experimenting a bear market right now.
- They haven't release any statement about the future of the 600 families affected by BG contamination.
- They haven't release any statement about any reforestation program and water treatment program for Cotui-Pueblo Viejo
Event though a lot of people are happy with the financial agreement with BG, some of the inner needs of a lot of Dominicans haven't been fulfill yet like health, employment,heavy pollution,evictions, housing, water, etc, etc.
People is still waiting..
Thursday, May 16, 2013
The dark business of Barrick Gold

I was reading the news about the new agreement with Barrick Gold and the government., and I could tell that a lot of people were already celebrating the great achivement but certain things cached my attention.
Of course, if they don't like their job no more, they are not cover by Dominican law or any labor department.No money whatsoever..
All Dominicans will be eventually a victim of that dark contamination: rich, middle class , poor as well.
They are going to leave over here a pool of cyanide, a simple Chernobyl of the Caribbean.
People will struggle over here for surviving!
Every penny we ever build in tourism or agriculture will be lost !

This is why not even reforestation can work:
No water, no soil, no reforestation capacity, no will..NO WAY

In other countries , like Colombia, mining companies before they start operations, they have to pass an auditing for environmental impact by the government.And a third private party auditing the mining companies and the government as well.!
I 've never heard anything like that in the last speech of BG or the government
The level of contamination in our country is already very high.And when the water is over , the amount of money offered by Barrick Gold will be worthless.People is going to be fighting them for their right to live !.
If people think it twice about these topics that I mention before, they wouldn't be so happy celebrating.
If people think it twice , they would realize that Barrick Gold so far has only bring destruction , evictions, illness, contamination and misery to dominicans
So you, as a conscious dominican..What are you going to do now?
I was reading the news about the new agreement with Barrick Gold and the government., and I could tell that a lot of people were already celebrating the great achivement but certain things cached my attention.
- In the last
interview with the 400 intoxicated Peruvian miners, they were
complaining that BG took their passports and documents..Why is that?
They are forced to work, no option whatsoever outside of BG, they are violating Dominican immigration laws because so far, none of them have working papers by the Dominican state, as some Haitian does.
No employment for dominicans whatsoever in one of the areas of DR with the highest unemployment rate !!
Of course, if they don't like their job no more, they are not cover by Dominican law or any labor department.No money whatsoever..
- How come that Barrick Gold have the power for the eviction of 600 families of Cotui? isn't the government the first one that were supposed to protect them?
- With the last contract , people is very happy but they haven't stop thinking about the island in 25 years.
The waters and land of the Cibao is already very contaminated, the heart of agriculture in the Caribbean..And it's only the first year! .
Does it worth it? How come BG never reimburse them?
All Dominicans will be eventually a victim of that dark contamination: rich, middle class , poor as well.
They are going to leave over here a pool of cyanide, a simple Chernobyl of the Caribbean.
People will struggle over here for surviving!
Every penny we ever build in tourism or agriculture will be lost !
This is why not even reforestation can work:
- When you cut a tree for wood purpose , you still have land for the next tree.
- When you cut a tree for open mining you use explosive to remove the vegetable lawyer of soil , living only caliche behind ( nothing can grow up out of there)
- They already use the water for cleaning their cyanide and mercury ..not for water thousand of acres of land..And that water can not be used for ANYTHING either
No water, no soil, no reforestation capacity, no will..NO WAY
In other countries , like Colombia, mining companies before they start operations, they have to pass an auditing for environmental impact by the government.And a third private party auditing the mining companies and the government as well.!
I 've never heard anything like that in the last speech of BG or the government
The level of contamination in our country is already very high.And when the water is over , the amount of money offered by Barrick Gold will be worthless.People is going to be fighting them for their right to live !.
If people think it twice about these topics that I mention before, they wouldn't be so happy celebrating.
If people think it twice , they would realize that Barrick Gold so far has only bring destruction , evictions, illness, contamination and misery to dominicans
So you, as a conscious dominican..What are you going to do now?
Tuesday, May 14, 2013
Barrick Gold Pollution
Pollution of Barrick Gold in Dominican Republic
Everybody is happy with BG agreement with the government last week , everything happily settle down for financial issues, but there is anything made to shrink the environmental impact ?
Barrick Gold has been accused of a number of environmentally unsound practices by environmental groups.
The company has countered accusations by activists, challenging the accuracy of criticisms.
Criticisms include poisonous spills of cyanide , mercury and other heavy metals in Hatillo and Margajita and Yuma river, leading to environmental damage and the poisoning of human populations.
The director of Corporación del Acueducto y Alcantarillado de Santo Domingo (CAASD), architect Alejandro Montás, declared that the Hatillo dam is contaminated by Barrick Gold and can not be used no more for human consumption

Dead fishes from Hatillo dam.
Water depletion is a major negative consequence of gold mining, not to mention the poisoning of thousand of fishes, cattle and crops.. The large amount of water required to run a gold mining operation exacerbates its impact on local communities of Cotui and Cibao valley, many of which are already experiencing drought.
Last year not 106 as they claim, but 400 peruvian miners show up at Centro médico Ureña Hernández of Cotuí, in DR with symptoms of intoxication.
The base of Cotui economy is not mine activities but agriculture production, mostly exportation of pineapple
There is a very delicate balance in Dominican ecosystem , and now everybody seem unfriendly to the natural resources situation.
A lot of people are complaining about the pollution left behind by the Rosario, but the super negative impact of Barrick Gold is unbearable..Once the gold oxide was processed, the sulfides were exposed and the mine was abandoned to its fate, allowing acidic waters from the Margajita River to drain away to the Hatillo Dam.
The acidic water is the result of a mixture of rainwater and the minerals from the gold sulfides that have remained exposed.
Another legacy of negative environmental impact from Rosario is the accumulation of heavy metals like iron, copper, and mercury , but now is way worst with Barrick Gold new damn El llagal and at at the site of the old plant and the sludge from Mejita and Margajita Rivers.

El Llagal , new illegal dam made by Barrick Gold
The contaminated Margarita river
Maguaca river
Contaminated Margajita River by Barrick Gold according to the president of Miguel de Peña García Fundation
There must be a serious environmental plans to clean the cyanide and mercury from DR , because the damage could be intolerable for any kind of vegetable animal or human life.Otherwise, get ready to start pointing fingers, as we did a couple weeks ago..
Somebody have to take the responsibility for no taking care of our natural resources, because once they are lost, they will be lost forever.
Somebody better be responsible for the ecological mess in our fragile ecosystem!
The gold have some value but our land and our people health is worthless?
Is it ok that we get our rivers and lakes full of cyanide and mercury and nobody complains about it?
Are we conscious that no fish, animal life or vegetable life can ever grow up in such poisonous conditions?
Did we ALL get insane?
Labels:
Barrick Gold,
cianuro,
contaminacion,
contaminated rivers,
contamination,
cyanide,
dam,
dile no a la Barrick,
el llagal,
fine,
gold shipment,
hatillo,
law,
led,
margarita,
mine,
mineria,
pollution,
presa
Thursday, May 9, 2013
The new dark deal between Barrick Gold and the Dominican state
Pact: Dominican Republic gets 51%; Barrick Gold Corp. 49%
Pact means US$1.5 billion more for the country
Meet the new pirates of 21st century!
Let's do some quick math here
Barrick’s 27 shipments since Nov. 11 were reportedly 9,040 kilos of gold and 24,357 of silver
kilo = 35.27 oz
Gold oz price :US 1600
9,040 kilos x US1,600.00 x 35.27=
U$510,145,280.00
__________________________
Silver: U$25.- per oz
US25 x 35.27 oz x 24, 357 kilos=
U$21,476,784
___________________
Total taken by Barrick gold till now :
U$531 Millions in 6 moth of operations
Based on previous numbers: Forecast a year of BG; U$1,062 millions
So, according to 7dias.com.do the dominican state will get U$11,600 millions for the life of that mine for 25 years .
U$11,600 / U$1062: : 10 years to achieve that goal for Dominicans.. the other 15 years are Barrick Gold 's time.
So the deal is not 49 %-51% as they initially said before.
The other open questions are these..
-How are they going to measure the already taken dore from DR? What is the procedure to put a value on the millions already taken away..? Or the one is going to be taken away in the future? Or our gold don't have a value no more?
I have to agree that there is a big improvement over the last contract,and some people are super optimist, but not everything is clear.
Again.. Now we have more questions than answers..
Pact means US$1.5 billion more for the country
Meet the new pirates of 21st century!
"CEO: We’re here to stay, unless we’re expelled"
Santo Domingo.-
After months of talks, protests and proposals, Dominican Republic and Barrick
Gold Corp. on Wednesday reached a new agreement on the contract for the mine at
Pueblo Viejo, Cotuí (northeast).
In a press conference after a meeting of several hours between senior officials and Barrick Gold executives in the National Palace, the government announced the pact to amend the contract, to be submitted to Congress as soon as possible.
"The objective of this review was to achieve a more balanced agreement for both parties and more in line with the Dominican reality, so we will sign a memorandum of understanding between the parties," said Presidency chief of staff Gustavo Montalvo.
Among other points, the agreement will raise Government revenue by more than US$1.5 billion over the project's duration, in addition to the US$10.0 billion projected in March 2013, and raises the profit split from 37.1% to 51.3 % for the country, and lowers Barrick’s from 62.9% to 48.7%
According to the document read by Montalvo, the projected tax revenue is US$11.6 billion, of which Pueblo Viejo will provide US$2.2 billion during the 2013-2016 period, subject to a gold price of US$1,600 per ounce. "The parties agreed to eliminate the 10% internal rate of return for the tax on the stake of net income to take effect."
The agreement eliminates Barrick’s privilege of starting payments to the State when the investment of capital is completed, for which tax payment tax would be immediate.
With the provisions, it will now take the Canadian miner until 2026 to recover its investment, and not bu 2016 as was stipulated.
Barrick Gold Pueblo Viejo CEO

For Barrick Gold Pueblo Viejo CEO Manuel Rocha the agreement is evidence of the miner’s commitment with Dominican Republic, from where he affirms will leave only if expelled. “We believe in the Dominican Republic ,we believe the democratically elected government here, what’s needed now is that we both do our part, it’s clear that Barrick Gold didn’t come just for a bit, we came to stay. We will work to stay unless we are expelled.”
________________________________________________________________________In a press conference after a meeting of several hours between senior officials and Barrick Gold executives in the National Palace, the government announced the pact to amend the contract, to be submitted to Congress as soon as possible.
"The objective of this review was to achieve a more balanced agreement for both parties and more in line with the Dominican reality, so we will sign a memorandum of understanding between the parties," said Presidency chief of staff Gustavo Montalvo.
Among other points, the agreement will raise Government revenue by more than US$1.5 billion over the project's duration, in addition to the US$10.0 billion projected in March 2013, and raises the profit split from 37.1% to 51.3 % for the country, and lowers Barrick’s from 62.9% to 48.7%
According to the document read by Montalvo, the projected tax revenue is US$11.6 billion, of which Pueblo Viejo will provide US$2.2 billion during the 2013-2016 period, subject to a gold price of US$1,600 per ounce. "The parties agreed to eliminate the 10% internal rate of return for the tax on the stake of net income to take effect."
The agreement eliminates Barrick’s privilege of starting payments to the State when the investment of capital is completed, for which tax payment tax would be immediate.
With the provisions, it will now take the Canadian miner until 2026 to recover its investment, and not bu 2016 as was stipulated.
Barrick Gold Pueblo Viejo CEO
For Barrick Gold Pueblo Viejo CEO Manuel Rocha the agreement is evidence of the miner’s commitment with Dominican Republic, from where he affirms will leave only if expelled. “We believe in the Dominican Republic ,we believe the democratically elected government here, what’s needed now is that we both do our part, it’s clear that Barrick Gold didn’t come just for a bit, we came to stay. We will work to stay unless we are expelled.”
Let's do some quick math here
Barrick’s 27 shipments since Nov. 11 were reportedly 9,040 kilos of gold and 24,357 of silver
kilo = 35.27 oz
Gold oz price :US 1600
9,040 kilos x US1,600.00 x 35.27=
U$510,145,280.00
__________________________
Silver: U$25.- per oz
US25 x 35.27 oz x 24, 357 kilos=
U$21,476,784
___________________
Total taken by Barrick gold till now :
U$531 Millions in 6 moth of operations
Based on previous numbers: Forecast a year of BG; U$1,062 millions
So, according to 7dias.com.do the dominican state will get U$11,600 millions for the life of that mine for 25 years .
U$11,600 / U$1062: : 10 years to achieve that goal for Dominicans.. the other 15 years are Barrick Gold 's time.
So the deal is not 49 %-51% as they initially said before.
The other open questions are these..
- -What happens with the retroactive payment?Is there going to be any as Danilo promised?
- -When is going to be the first payment and for how much?
- -Any serious reforestation plans for the future?
- -Are they going to pay the fines for smuggling dore?
- -When are they going to pay the millions they already owe to Dominican state? Arent they?
- Are they going to have a water treatment facility to clean the cyanide and mercury?Do they talk about it?
- What about any plans for clean water and sanitation for the community, the second poorest one in DR??
- Three years ago , people used to have their own water, now they dont have water or river because it's so polluted, so they are allow to take only 2 gallons of water per family from a water truck, because BG is using their water for the mercury and cyanide procedure.
- What can expect the people from Cotui in the next 25 years? Eviction of everybody?
- How are they going to clean their toxic mess in Hatillo dam, and the rivers of Cotui?
- -Are they going to provide employment for Dominicans? To have 97% of foreign crew is against dominicanl law..Right?
-How are they going to measure the already taken dore from DR? What is the procedure to put a value on the millions already taken away..? Or the one is going to be taken away in the future? Or our gold don't have a value no more?
I have to agree that there is a big improvement over the last contract,and some people are super optimist, but not everything is clear.
Again.. Now we have more questions than answers..
Wednesday, May 8, 2013
Dominican government, Barrick Gold strike mine deal; reports

Santo Domingo (hoy.com.do).- After a marathon meeting Tuesday the Dominican government and Barrick Gold Corp.
reached a tentative agreement to amend the Pueblo Viejo mine contract, although
how a new tax would be levied was left pending, local media report.
Canadian miner executives John Lawson Thornton, Calvin Francis Pon, Alann Hjordis Heath, Derek Hudson Burney, Kelvin Paul Michel Dushnisky, Andrew Lloyd and Curtis Arthur Johnson arrived in the country Monday noon and met with government officials headed by Presidency chief of staff Gustavo Montalvo.
On Tuesday president Danilo Medina said he hopes to strike a deal. "It’s a negotiation. You start with endpoints and reach a midpoint. God willing a midpoint will be reached today (Tuesday)."

There should be more scrutiny focus on the ambiguity of Customs and the laws of a mining country that in an act of ignorance or permissiveness, haven't even care to purchase a lab that allow to detect dore and other metals, taken away from DR under the shadow of night ... Towards a rising movement that bet on softening popular anger against the mining activity of BG and his deadly pollution, after being fine tuned with the same money that has come out of the innards of our land ... Towards the talks between the Government and the arrogant company that haven't pay a dime to the Dominican government yet...
We dominicans are so feed up with lame excuses from BG, who got a 48 BILLION gold mine for free, over and over and over..
In this case we only hope that the final deal would be beneficial to the VERY poor communities around Barrick Gold, where children can get an education , people can go to the hospitals, people can get a decent job, not a total pollution or a total devastation situation ..At the end,we are not asking for too much, just that people can get a REAL and decent way of living..
On February 27, in the National Assembly, President Danilo Medina created great expectations to raise the urgent need to review the contract with Barrick Pueblo Viejo. And the people took his word. A double-edged sword. Now many people expect him to act under the power of his own speech.
And we do not ask much. Just ask him to be thoughtful and not give in to blackmail or urban legend from the powerful mining company. Do not delay the awaited good news for the whole country.
Again , we hope that God give wisdom and patience to the Dominican leaders, so the deal would be really beneficial to a third world country like Dominican Republic
Canadian miner executives John Lawson Thornton, Calvin Francis Pon, Alann Hjordis Heath, Derek Hudson Burney, Kelvin Paul Michel Dushnisky, Andrew Lloyd and Curtis Arthur Johnson arrived in the country Monday noon and met with government officials headed by Presidency chief of staff Gustavo Montalvo.
On Tuesday president Danilo Medina said he hopes to strike a deal. "It’s a negotiation. You start with endpoints and reach a midpoint. God willing a midpoint will be reached today (Tuesday)."
There should be more scrutiny focus on the ambiguity of Customs and the laws of a mining country that in an act of ignorance or permissiveness, haven't even care to purchase a lab that allow to detect dore and other metals, taken away from DR under the shadow of night ... Towards a rising movement that bet on softening popular anger against the mining activity of BG and his deadly pollution, after being fine tuned with the same money that has come out of the innards of our land ... Towards the talks between the Government and the arrogant company that haven't pay a dime to the Dominican government yet...
We dominicans are so feed up with lame excuses from BG, who got a 48 BILLION gold mine for free, over and over and over..
In this case we only hope that the final deal would be beneficial to the VERY poor communities around Barrick Gold, where children can get an education , people can go to the hospitals, people can get a decent job, not a total pollution or a total devastation situation ..At the end,we are not asking for too much, just that people can get a REAL and decent way of living..
On February 27, in the National Assembly, President Danilo Medina created great expectations to raise the urgent need to review the contract with Barrick Pueblo Viejo. And the people took his word. A double-edged sword. Now many people expect him to act under the power of his own speech.
And we do not ask much. Just ask him to be thoughtful and not give in to blackmail or urban legend from the powerful mining company. Do not delay the awaited good news for the whole country.
Again , we hope that God give wisdom and patience to the Dominican leaders, so the deal would be really beneficial to a third world country like Dominican Republic
Monday, May 6, 2013
Barrick says they don't know the reason for their shipment retention
RE: Say no to Barrick Gold pirates
06 de mayo del 2013
Barrick says they don't know the reason for their shipment retention
Barrick Gold dice desconocer razones de retención de nuevo embarque
ww.7dias.com.doSanto Domingo06 de mayo del 2013

En un comunicado emitido este lunes, la empresa desmiente que el retraso en el embarque obedezca a la detección de irregularidades en los documentos de declaración que deben ser llenados.
“Toda la documentación de los embarques realizados a la fecha ha sido inspeccionada y aprobada por la propia DGA. Cada vez que la DGA nos ha comunicado algún cambio en cuanto a los trámites de exportaciones, hemos procedido a acogerlos. En dos de los embarques tuvimos inconvenientes debido a limitaciones del propio sistema SIGA de la DGA”, apunta Barrick Gold.
Insiste en que, hasta ahora, no ha sido notificada por la Colecturía de la DGA en el Aeropuerto Internacional de las Américas de que hubiera error o irregularidad en la declaración, por lo que ignora las razones de la medida de las autoridades.
En algunos círculos se comenta que con este tipo de medidas el gobierno del presidente Danilo Medina ejerce presión para lograr la revisión del contrato.
In some circles, people comment that these are measures by the goverment of the president to force a long waited revision of the contract -scam
“Reiteramos que en todos los aspectos de nuestras operaciones, perseguimos el cumplimiento a cabalidad de todas las leyes y normas establecidas por la autoridades nacionales por lo que esperamos que se normalicen los trámites para poder proseguir con la exportación como se ha hecho con los 27 embarques anteriores, todos debidamente autorizados por la DGA”, concluye la minera.
The Customs Agency instructed its Punta Caucedo Port office at Las Americas Airport (AILA) to retain Barrick’s gold cargos until it reaches a new agreement with the Government.
Esta misma mañana, autoridades aduaneras informaron que procederían a tomar nuevas muestras del retenido embarque número 28 de oro y plata para comprobar la correspondencia entre lo embarcado y lo declarado.
The information was provided at Las Americas, from where a detailed report was sent to president Danilo Medina , after inspections conducted on Barrick’s exports found alleged irregularities.
The Government reportedly instructed Customs to slap the mining company with more than US$96.0 million in fines for its doré shipments.
______________________________________________________________________________
Poor Barrick Gold, so naive and innocent..Maybe if some employee would ever read a dominican newspaper and see what EVERYBODY in DR is thinking about them ,
-about smuggling gold in front of the authorities
-the eviction to hundred of families,
-the disrespect to the Dominican president
-the TOTAL IMPUNITY while breaking dozens of dominican laws
-the problems with the government,
-scams ,
-the arrogance with the press, the government and the Dominican people,
-illegal dams constructions,
-why they were expelled from Chile last month,
- illness and cyanide pollution in a bunch of rivers of Cibao valley,
-how they bring misery to the communities that they touch,
-and most of all, how Barrick Gold get the pinnacle of infamy ,They would get an answer..
But of course..Barrick Gold didnt know anything about it !
"Poor Barrick Gold.. Such naive and innocent` " !
After 500 years , the gold exploitation continues at ANY cost..!
Labels:
Barrick Gold,
contaminacion,
contamination,
Dominican Republic,
gold shipment,
history of barrick gold,
law,
mine,
Republica Dominicana,
say no to Barrick gold,
smuggling
Location:
Dominican Republic
Friday, May 3, 2013
Labels:
Barrick,
Barrick Gold,
cianuro,
dile no a la Barrick,
Dominican Republic,
fine,
history of barrick gold,
law,
mine,
mineria,
pollution,
Santo Domingo,
say no to Barrick gold,
scam,
smuggling
Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Barrick Gold Encountering Problems with USA, Chile and Dominican Republic
Barrick Gold Problems in the americas
In Reno Nevada, Barrick Gold failed to report that it released toxic chemicals including mercury, cyanide and lead. The Dominican Republic asked for a review of a contract it had with the Canadian mining company that could threaten the government.
The Chilean Story
A month prior to the Atacama Water Board in Chile was to request that Barrick Gold Mines Corporation should be fined for not fulfilling its promise to protect the glaciers within the borders of its bi-national Chile-Argentina project, called Pascua Lama, Barrick was fined in Reno, Nevada for releasing toxic chemical substances.
Days after a Chilean court upheld the injunction rendering their multi-billion dollar investment indefinitely stalled, Barrick Gold executives said in a shareholders meeting in Toronto that they might abandon the Pascua-Lama project altogether.
Three high-level executives from Barrick's South America branch resigned Thursday, further complicating the mining giant’s South American operations. The resignations include the company’s regional president, Guillermo Caló. Robert Mayne-Nicholls and Rodrigo Jiménez, the director of operations and the regional vice president, also announced their departures.
In the Canadian company’s annual report, Chairman Peter Munk lamented the unanticipated financial issues at the mine, though he prioritized its rebound.
“We suffered a significant delay and a major cost overrun at our flagship Pascua-Lama project on the border of Chile and Argentina,” Munk said in the report. “Since that fact surfaced — so unexpectedly — the main focus of our company, at every level, has been directed at ensuring that this project will meet its new cost and schedule estimate.”
A 48 percent decline in the company’s share price and disappointing gold prices have characterized a challenging year for Barrick, Reuters reported Wednesday.
The court of appeals in Chile’s northern Copiapó Region granted an indigenous community’s request to suspend the mine’s operations April 10. Minera Nevada, S.P.A., the Barrick subsidiary operating Pascua-Lama, has deflected allegations of negligent environmental behavior for most of its decade-long existence on the border between Argentina and Chile.
The American Story
According to the Huffington Post, the Environmental Protection Agency ordered three mines in northern Nevada to pay a total of $618,000 for failing to report this release of toxic chemicals, including cyanide, lead and mercury from 2005-08.
All three mines are subsidiaries of the Toronto-based Barrick Gold Corp. — Barrick Cortez Inc.'s Cortez Gold Mine near Crescent Valley, Barrick Gold US Inc.'s Ruby Hill Gold Mine near Eureka and Homestake Mining Co.'s Bald Mountain Gold Mine near the Ruby Lake National Wildlife Refuge, according to the Huffington Post.
The three agreed to pay a total of $278,000 in fines and spend an additional $340,000 on an environmentally beneficial project as part of a settlement for allegedly underestimating reports of their toxic release inventory required under the federal Emergency Planning and Community Right-to-Know Act, EPA officials said.
"Cyanide, lead and mercury used at these mines have the potential to pose a health threat," said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA's regional administrator for the Pacific Southwest Region, based in San Francisco.
"We insist on accurate reporting of chemical releases so that citizens have a clear idea of the risk from the facilities near their communities," said Blumenfeld.
The supplemental project will be conducted at the Cortez mine to identify the metal compounds formed in its oxide mill process and test methods to verify the quantities of new chemical compounds manufactured during the process.
The companies also agreed to perform audits at all other U.S. mining operations Barrick owns in Nevada and Montana and to determine if any reporting violations occurred and if so pay a $10,000 penalty per violation up to a total of $250,000
"Nonetheless, to achieve regulatory certainty regarding its TRI obligations, Barrick has agreed to enter into a settlement agreement with the EPA," said Louis Schack, director of communications for Barrick Gold of North America, based in Salt Lake City, Utah.
"Crumbs for your gold, the dominican story”
Meanwhile, in the Dominican Republic, independent deputy Carlos Gabriel García commented on Barrick Gold’s Manuel Rocha’s insistence that the government must comply with its agreement with Barrick. Gabriel García referred to this as “challenging” the national interest.
According to the Dominican portal, El Nacional, Deputy García believes that Rocha aims to silence the domestic sectors that have spoken out in favor of revising the agreement with Barrick, in which the Dominican government “will receive crumbs in exchange for its gold.”
He said it seems that Rocha is unaware that the company Place Dome was the one that won the bid to explore for gold and that the agreement signed back in 2002 was beneficial to the Dominican government.
The author of the draft resolution of the Chamber of Deputies that asks the government for a revision of the agreement with Barrick, believes that “this agreement cannot be above the interests of the country.”
Rocha, Barrick Gold representative in the DR, defended the 2009 gold exploration agreement with the government. “Since the beginning, we have been very clear that this contract was negotiated in a process that went on for nearly 2 years, between the government and the company along with an expert brought in from Europe, France specifically, and from the Inter-American Development Bank,” he said.
But in fact that gold exploration agreement is a big scam , with so many picky details that dominicans will never see a dime out of the mine, and the dominicans see themselves in the eyes of Chile, where Barrick Gold spend 16 years exploiting a Chilean mines, and Barrick Gold NEVER pay a dime out of it.
The Chamber of Deputies decided that three commissions will present a report on the agreement with Barrick Gold. Mateo Aquino Febrillet, Rector of the Autonomous University of Santo Domingo (UASD), is one of the illustrious Dominicans who also supports the revision of the agreement.
In the Dominican Republic, meanwhile, the soaring price of gold has the government wanting more from the Pueblo Viejo mine, which has 20 million ounces of gold reserves as well as silver, copper and zinc.
Barrick owns 60 percent of the venture and Goldcorp Inc. of Vancouver, British Columbia, owns 40 percent. The companies reopened the mine last year after investing nearly $4 billion, the largest direct foreign investment ever in the Dominican Republic, and have estimated it will eventually pay about $7 billion to the government.
But President Danilo Medina and Congress have yet to see any money. They want to rewrite the 25-year contract, which promises royalties only after the two Canadian companies recoup their investment and the venture's profits rise above 10 percent.
Barrick's executives "have to change their attitude, because if they don't, the president has told them: 'Either you negotiate or more taxes will be imposed,'" said Ramon Peralta, Medina's administrative minister.
President Danilo Medina’s "prudent deadline" issued to Barrick Gold Corp to renegotiate the gold mining contract expires today and has the population on edge awaiting the outcome of the standoff between the government and the Canada-based company which operates the facility at Pueblo Viejo (central), El Caribe reports.
It said Medina is expected to refer to the topic this week before leaving for the summit in Costa Rica.
The chief executive is expected to announce the result of the talks before month’s end, according to Presidency Administrative minister José Ramón Peralta.
Medina’s deadline to Barrick Gold formed part of his speech to Congress on February 27, and has since been accompanied by the retention of several shipments of ore at Customs, on violations including the miner’s mistaken ship manifest of the precious metal’s country-of-origin ( smuggling).
In country after country, the world's biggest miners are facing new environmental standards, confronting changing tax and currency laws and defending long-term contracts they thought were written in stone.
Barrick gold only provides misery and toxic pollution to the communities were they go.They use tons of cyanide and mercury in their operations for gold extraction, regardless of poor peasants, crops, river and cattle in the exploited areas.
The situation now is just unbearable for the affected communities..And there are a lot of riots every week in different part of Dominican republic because of that.
They have a long history of scams, heavy pollution, illness, bribery and heavy metal contamination.
In a small island like Dominican Republic the consequences are simply lethal...
They are just destroying the island, were no other kind of human, vegetable or animal kind of life can surface out of there in any circumstances...
Say no to Barrick Gold TODAY !
Labels:
Barrick,
Barrick Gold,
Chile,
contaminacion,
contamination,
cyanide,
dile no a la Barrick,
Dominican Republic,
fine,
gold shipment,
pollution,
Republica Dominicana,
Santo Domingo,
scam
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)