Wysiwyg
Everyone wants money
- Joined
- 8 August 2006
- Posts
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- 284
Yes I support the governments ROI. People employed, taxes and royalties paid. While working toward coal fired power stations being phased out, eventually.So you support a Government operating in a supposedly free market economy to "invest" tax payer funds to help a foreign company develop a coal resource that is estimated to need a thermal coal price of $100-110 US to break even.
Supply and demand is constantly in flux. No future demand? Why construct?Note that the increased production equates to 10% of the current seaborne market. It will ensure depressed prices for a very long time, which will increase the ToT income shock we're experiencing.
It isn't wasted when people are employed, taxes and royalties are paid. The end game is supply/demand and this proposal is counter present trend. Like demand for iron ore was sky high so -> massive mining infrastructure investment to meet demand -> now less demand and depressed prices.It's not even about climate. It's the fact we have a Government wasting hundreds of millions of dollars, unless of course you believe coal is somehow going to near double in price over the next few years?
Who knows what will happen? Certainly not you or I! Here is a slice of Australian history regarding black coal, the Americans, Israel, OPEC and the AUD/USD. Shows some of the many market forces in play. Coal at $12.50 per tonne.It's not even about climate. It's the fact we have a Government wasting hundreds of millions of dollars, unless of course you believe coal is somehow going to near double in price over the next few years?
2.2.12 Export Prices for Australian Black Coal
Between 1960 and 1973, the average A$ FOB price per tonne that Australian coal producers
received for their black coal exports varied between $8.00 and $12.50 per tonne. This period is
now viewed with a fair degree of nostalgia by coal buyers as a time when energy prices in
general and Australian black coal price in particular were stable and at very low levels. The
low energy price environment was supported by a stable US$:A$ exchange rate, which was the
result of the Bretton Woods Accord that the United States and other major Western economies
signed in 1944.
The stable and low energy price environment started to unravel during October 1971, when the
United States unilaterally terminated its participation in the Bretton Woods Accord. As a result
of its unilateral action, the US$ depreciated significantly against the A$ between 1972 and
1974. Since Australia‘s black coal exports were priced in US$, this market reaction would
normally have resulted in Australia‘s black coal producers reducing their output and/or
exerting pressure on miners to accept very small adjustments in their annual wages.
However, in October 1973, Australia‘s coal producers were rescued from that possible
predicament by OPEC, which imposed an embargo on oil exports to the United States and a
number of other Western countries as punishment for their bias toward Israel during the 1973
Yom Kippur War. Along with the oil embargo, Saudi Arabia and other Arab state members
increased OPEC‘s posted oil price in October 1973 from $3.00 per barrel to 5.11 per barrel.
By 1975, the price of oil rose as high as $12 per barrel after which it traded between $12 and
$15 per barrel from 1975 through 1978. Then, in 1979, the shah of Iran fell, leading to the
Iranian Oil Crisis, which resulted in the price of oil increasing from $15.85 per barrel (April 5,
1979) to $39.50 per barrel in early 1980. From that point on, an oil glut emerged causing
nominal oil prices to slide to around $10 per barrel by 1986.
The impact of the oil price increases and decreases during the 1970s and 1980s was a
significant factor in driving the expansion of Australia‘s black coal exports. The increase in the
FOB A$ price for Australian black coal provided Australian coal producers with substantial
windfall profits through 1980. Between 1980 and 1986, the nominal US$ price for Australian
black coal decreased from $54.85 to $36.65 per tonne, a 33 percent decline. However, the
impact on the A$ price of this large drop in the US$ price was more than offset by the 40
percent depreciation in the A$ against the US$ over the same time period.
The temperature isn't any different from at least 40 years ago plus from our personal experience. Do you have any experience in Australia?
Yes I support the governments ROI. People employed, taxes and royalties paid. While working toward coal fired power stations being phased out, eventually.
Supply and demand is constantly in flux. No future demand? Why construct?
It isn't wasted when people are employed, taxes and royalties are paid. The end game is supply/demand and this proposal is counter present trend. Like demand for iron ore was sky high so -> massive mining infrastructure investment to meet demand -> now less demand and depressed prices.
Who knows what will happen? Certainly not you or I! Here is a slice of Australian history regarding black coal, the Americans, Israel, OPEC and the AUD/USD. Shows some of the many market forces in play. Coal at $12.50 per tonne.
So you quote coal prices from decades past, that are far below the break even cost for Adani of $100-100 US? Doesn't seem to make the economics stack up any better. Vale the QLD tax payers. Already in massive debt and their Govt is going to throw money at a project that wont make a return on their investment.
The Adani coal mine in Queensland will be an environmental disaster. I'm not sure however if it will be a financial disaster for Adani.
Adani is India's premier power company. The coal it is mining will supply its own power stations. If the choice is between owning your own coal mine (with a ton of local infrastructure support) or having to pay another coal miner maybe this situation will be the most profitable. One could certainly see some interesting cost shifting in the process.
http://www.adanipower.com/
Whilst your rhetoric is a bit off thread, I thought it necessary to reply......you see, unlike the Labor Party, we have adult Governments who has the expertise to do some market research and is preparing for the future....The QLD and WA governments do there home work and obviously know that a year from now the price of coal and iron ore will rise and they will be well prepared to meet the market demand....If it had been the Labor Party, they would have sat on there hands and done nothing.
The Labor Party believed in a fellow named Tim Flannery, who told the three Eastern Labor states at the time a furphy in 2007 that there would not be enough rain to fill the dams, so the Labor Party, instead of doing some more research, believed this brain storm and spent billions of dollars on desal plants now in moth balls....now that was not very good thinking.
I was in sales and marketing for 28 years and we had to predict by various methods how our sales would be 12 months down the track...we would take appropriate action to insure we were on target and this is what the QLD and WA governments have done....Smart people!!!!!
China CO2 emissions to rise by one third before 2030 peak - study,
http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/11/14/china-carbon-idUSL3N0T41EY20141114
The return to the Queensland state government is in the vicinity of $20 billion in royalties irrespective of what the price may be at the time.
http://www.adanimining.com/pdfs/MLA 70441/MLA_70441 Part_5.pdf
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So do you believe fossil fuels should receive such large licks of subsidies as opposed to renewable energy?
http://online.wsj.com/articles/germanys-expensive-gamble-on-renewable-energy-1409106602WILSTER, Germany””In a sandy marsh on the outskirts of this medieval hamlet, Germany's next autobahn will soon take shape.
The Stromautobahn, as locals call it, won't carry Audis and BMW's BMW.XE +0.89% , but high-voltage electricity over hundreds of miles of aluminum and steel cables stretching from the North Sea to Germany's industrial corridor in the south.
The project is the linchpin of Germany's Energiewende, or energy revolution, a mammoth, trillion-euro plan to wean the country off nuclear and fossil fuels by midcentury and the top domestic priority of Chancellor Angela Merkel.
But many companies, economists and even Germany's neighbors worry that the enormous cost to replace a currently working system will undermine the country's industrial base and weigh on the entire European economy. Germany's second-quarter GDP decline of 0.6%, reported earlier this month, put a damper on overall euro-zone growth, leaving it flat for the quarter.
Average electricity prices for companies have jumped 60% over the past five years because of costs passed along as part of government subsidies of renewable energy producers. Prices are now more than double those in the U.S.
"German industry is going to gradually lose its competitiveness if this course isn't reversed soon," said Kurt Bock, chief executive of BASF SE, BAS.XE +2.14% the world's largest chemical maker.
China is starting to limit it's coal imports. The turning on of massive amounts of nuclear power over the next decade, along with a 2 pipe lines for gas imports from Russia doesn't seem to indicate further increases in demand from China will occur either.
As previously stated, the pledge between Obama and china was just window dressing.....it will never happen.
Both the USA and China talk about a direct action plan.
The Green/Labor left wing socialist must surely have egg all over their little faces......Most of them with only a half a brain between the lot them
In both California and China, the cap and trade program is just one element of a much more comprehensive effort to reduce pollution. For example, like California, China requires its utilities to help customers use energy more efficiently. Both also have ambitious targets to increase generation from renewable resources. And China has pledged to adopt more stringent fuel standards to slash air pollutants and is piloting efforts to reduce reliance on coal-fired electricity.
Seven different cities and regions across China including Beijing, Shanghai, Shenzhen, Tianjin, Chongqing, Guangdong and Hubei have pilot cap-and-trade programs in development. These cities and provinces represent a range of different industries, so each program will be tailored to local characteristics with different reduction targets. Today, the city of Shenzhen’s launch will limit carbon emissions from more than 630 industrial companies, with a target to reduce the city’s overall carbon consumption by 21 percent by 2015. Shenzhen will be joined over the next year by the six remaining programs and if all goes well, China aims to have a nationwide system in place by 2016.
Renewable energy? Do you mean like Germany?
http://online.wsj.com/articles/germanys-expensive-gamble-on-renewable-energy-1409106602
I am guessing it will take a few years to plan and then 3 weeksto build a dozen nuclear power stations in China. Do they have uranium ? Not sure I would like China to be a nuclear expert, never know what they might make !
If it is OK with the Greens for China to switch from coal to nuclear, how come we are not allowed to build another couple of Snowy Mountains Hydros around the place. I would be quite happy to live next to a lake created by a dam used for Hydro but I don't want to live near a nuclear power station.
The South Island of NZ has lakes all over the place, tourists rave over them, every large lake is part of a Hydro scheme and it is all so sensible, practical and efficient.
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