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Stock Lobster

04/19/08 10:31 AM

#273273 RE: Stock Lobster #273272

Reuters: Ecuador freezes mining exploration, boosts control

Fri Apr 18, 2008 6:33pm EDT
(Adds mining ministry's statement in paragraph 6th)

By Alonso Soto

QUITO, April 18 (Reuters) - Ecuador froze all mining exploration in the country on Friday and revoked hundreds of concessions, in a move that will increase the leftist government's control over natural resources.

The decision by the government-controlled assembly suspends exploration until a new mining law is approved aimed at boosting the state's share of revenue. It says the law must be approved within six months.

Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa wants to rework mining, oil and other deals to direct billions of dollars of revenue into state coffers to pay for increased social spending.

The government estimates the country holds $130 billion worth of metal deposits. Mining companies invest about $100 million per year in Ecuadorean exploration, industry officials say.

The wide-ranging decree could hamper the country's growing mining industry by delaying production plans and scaring away much-needed investment, analysts and company executives said. Share prices of Canadian miners operating in Ecuador plummeted sharply on Friday on news of the decree.

The mining ministry said in a statement that it would deliver the first draft of the mining law and project to build the state-run company on Monday. However, it said a final version of the law could be ready by late May.

Ecuador has no significant output of precious metals, but dozens of firms are exploring for copper and gold, including Canada's Aurelian Resources (ARU.TO: Quote, Profile, Research), Corriente Resources (CTQ.TO: Quote, Profile, Research) and IamGold Corp (IMG.TO: Quote, Profile, Research).

The three companies will be forced to halt operations in their concessions.

Assembly head Alberto Acosta said the decree was "a historic victory" and later told Reuters he will push a referendum to ban open-pit mining for metals.

Friday's decree also limits mining holdings to three concessions per company, and calls for revoking all their remaining concessions without compensation.

A top mining ministry official said the ministry will call affected companies for talks next week, and plan the suspension and revoking of concessions.

"We have flexibility to apply the decree and interpret it in some issues, but the suspension and holdings reduction is something we can't undo," said the official, who asked not to be named because he was not allowed to speak publicly.

Eric Zaunscherb, a mining analyst with Haywood Securities in Vancouver, said the decree "was an ambush... and fraught with negative actions that make Ecuador inhospitable to mining investment."

The 130-member assembly, which is rewriting the constitution and also acting as the legislature, has the power to issue decrees that cannot be vetoed by Correa. The assembly also ordered the creation of a state mining company.

Correa said on Friday he supports mining, but wants better terms for the state in future deals.

"It is absurd to say 'no' to mining," Correa told hundreds mine workers from his balcony in the presidential palace. "This is about mining with social, environmental and economic responsibility."

Workers worried about losing their jobs booed Correa during his speech. (Editing by Christian Wiessner)


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Stock Lobster

04/19/08 10:35 AM

#273274 RE: Stock Lobster #273272

CT: The candidates' bad energy ideas

chicagotribune.com
Steve Chapman
April 17, 2008

In the realm of energy policy, there are a great many bad ideas and a very few good ones. The usual practice of presidential candidates is to 1) sift through all these proposals, 2) separate the wheat from the chaff, and 3) keep the chaff.

This year, the two parties are competing to show who is most eager to discard sound economics and long-term prudence in favor of appeasing aggrieved motorists. Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton are pandering with a proposal to punish oil companies with a windfall profits tax. John McCain has targeted the same group by urging a federal gas tax holiday from Memorial Day to Labor Day.

What motivates them is high pump prices, which are at odds with the popular view of cheap gasoline as a national birthright. One common defect of the candidates' measures, though, is that they would not actually reduce prices.

The Democratic option rests on the unshakable belief that Big Oil is guilty of chronic profiteering at public expense. In fact, from 1987 through 2006, oil and gas companies did worse than other industrial companies on return on investment in all but four years. When the price of gasoline is high, drivers notice. But when it's low, as it has been for most of the period since 1982, everyone takes it for granted.

No idea can be definitively judged until it has been tried, which makes the Obama-Clinton approach particularly hard to defend. Congress, you see, enacted a windfall profits tax on oil back during the Carter administration. You would think Democrats would not want to remind voters of that president or embrace his errors, but you would be wrong.

By almost any standard, the last windfall profits tax was self-defeating. According to a 2006 study by the Congressional Research Service, it generated less than one-fourth of the revenues that were expected. Worse yet, it reduced domestic oil production by as much as 8 percent.

Obama has yet to provide details of his plan. Under Clinton's version, if a company's profits rose above a specified excess level, the government would take 50 percent of the "windfall"—in addition to what it reaps from the existing corporate income tax.

The expropriation would deter investment in exploration and drilling by reducing the potential payoff. It would depress the supply of oil over the long run, which would push prices up, not down. Punishing Big Oil would mean hurting ourselves.

McCain avoids this error in favor of a different one. He wants to stop collecting federal gas taxes for three months, which he says "will be an immediate economic stimulus—taking a few dollars off the price of a tank of gas."

It sounds like a simple, sure remedy, and it is simple and sure. It's just not a remedy.

As energy analyst Jerry Taylor of the Cato Institute points out, prices are now at the level required to balance supply and demand. Cut prices by the amount of the gas tax, and consumption will rise, pushing prices back up. So drivers would get no holiday, and the economy would get no stimulus.

About the only effect would be to "transfer money from the federal government to the oil companies," Taylor says. If the oil companies don't deserve a windfall profits tax, neither do they deserve an additional windfall. The gas tax hiatus also would enlarge the federal deficit, since McCain would take general revenues to make up the loss to the highway trust fund—and at the moment, there aren't any extra revenues waiting to be spent.

Besides proposing useless or damaging ideas, the candidates also have passed up the single best idea for energy policy: a carbon tax that would curb use of fuels that release greenhouse gases, while encouraging development of clean alternatives. Better yet would be a carbon tax whose revenues go to cut payroll taxes for Social Security and Medicare, rewarding work without raising the deficit.

It's a win-win concept with wide support among economists, but little among politicians. That's the nature of energy policy in an election year: Any bad idea may be adopted, while the good ones remain orphans.

Steve Chapman is a member of the Tribune's editorial board. E-mail: schapman@tribune.com

Copyright © 2008, Chicago Tribune

www.chicagotribune.com/news/columnists/chi-oped0417chapmanapr17,1,349864.column