Monday, September 8, 2008

Ecuador Mining Law: leaked info

Reuters has got its hands on a copy of Ecuador's not-yet-finished mining law. It makes it clear that things might change between this copy obtained and the final law that's likely to come out after the referendum, but it looks like things are going to be perfectly workable for the companies currently exploring and constructing mines.

Methinks there are people in the "referendum No" camp that want sectors of society to see the draft law now and make them see that Ecuador will not be green heaven and will have a mining industry.

Another thing: Anderson, you are a prize fool. If you didn't know it before it's about time you realized it.

Here's the Reuters story...you be the judge:

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QUITO, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Ecuador plans to charge mining companies a 3 to 8 percent sliding-scale royalty based on sales and will negotiate terms of new extraction contracts, according to a draft of the mining bill obtained by Reuters on Monday.

The highly anticipated bill sets tougher environmental controls, limits exploration and forbids companies from filing suits on courts outside South America. However, it also offers miners a few tax breaks and doesn't limit the ownership of mining assets as some analysts feared.

A top mining ministry official confirmed the authenticity of the bill document released by the the country's mining chamber website (www.cme.org.ec.).

However, the official, who asked not be named because he was not allowed to speak publicly, said the draft bill could be changed as it is reviewed by President Rafael Correa.

The new mining law, which is expected to be introduced after September, is key for the development of the country's nascent sector that has recently found massive gold, silver and copper deposits coveted by industry giants.

Correa, a leftist economist who took office last year, says he supports big mining projects, but he has kept investors jittery with his erratic mining policy that allowed for a ban on mining activity and the takeover of hundreds of concessions in April.

Ecuador lacks significant output of precious metals, but a handful of foreign companies including Corriente Resources (CTQ.TO: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and IamGold Corp (IMG.TO: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) are exploring for minerals. (Reporting by Alonso Soto; editing by )