In 2005, Robert Friedland, chairman of the Vancouver-based Ivanhoe Mines Ltd.,  famously regaled potential investors in Florida with his Mongolian  mega-project, the “cash machine we really intend to build,” – a massive  copper-gold and coal project in the southern Gobi desert called Oyu  Tolgoi or Turquoise Hill.
Friedland talked about the size of his  claim: “Mongolia is three times the size of France, twice the size of  Texas, 2.6 million people, and our lands...are about the same size as  Japan...about 135,000 square kilometres, the largest land position in  the mining industry.”[1]
Friedland  talked about his good relations with the government and low anticipated  tax rates: “Now Mongolian political leaders have helped us a lot, the  president of Mongolia came to Canada. We met with Paul Martin and we’ve  signed a free trade agreement between Canada and Mongolia to avoid  double taxation. We have virtually no taxation contemplated on the  remittance of dividends and we are in the final stages of a very  important long-term agreement with the Mongolian government that will  protect our stakeholders on everything we are going to do.... if our tax  rate was say 5% or 6%, we only have to be half as good as Grasberg to  make as much money for our shareholders.”
Friedland talked a lot about how much money would be made:
•  Block caving was described as a cash cow – “The amount of money that  this block cave can draw off is terrifying...typical operating cost for a  block cave would be a dollar or two a tonne. And about 3 or 4 dollars a  tonne to mill it say 5 or 6 bucks a tonne, all in. What’s amazing is  this 3%, 4% copper is 100-dollar rock. So you’re in the T-shirt  business, you’re making T-shirts for 5 bucks and selling them for 100  dollars. That is a robust margin.”
• Labour costs would be low –  “Now you can see how these trucks are just going to come in here and  pull money out of the bank. The mining is automatic. It’s just like a  rock factory. There’s no moving parts, it can be totally automated. Kids  with joysticks can be running these things from the surface. You don’t  need any people underground, it’s all done by gravity drainage.”
•  The associated coal was another money maker – “These old coals are  really the Beluga caviar of coals.... And you can make more money  digging that stuff up, and hauling it south, than you can screwing  around with sort of a marginal gold mine anywhere in the world.... You  can mine this coal for a buck a ton. If it’s worth 100 bucks a ton, it’s  a quarter of an ounce gold equivalent. If it’s 50 dollars steam coal,  it’s still several grams per ton gold equivalent, and you don’t have to  mill it, you don’t have to wash it, you don’t have to clean it, you  don’t have to process it. All you do is do what the Chinese are doing in  these pictures. You load it into trucks and they go across the Gobi  Desert, see that dust, heading for China. And you trade it for money.  This is what mining is supposed to be.”
Finally, Friedland talked  about the lack of social hassles in the desert – “And the nice thing  about the Gobi is, there’s no railroad tracks in the way, there are no  people in the way, there are no houses in the way...there’s no  NGOs...You’ve got lots of room for waste dumps without disrupting the  populations...”
If Friedland “underestimated” anything in his  typically hyperbolic speech it was likely the social landscape. When  Friedland’s speech – especially the analogy to making 95% profit on  T-shirts – hit Mongolia and was translated it caused enough anger to  lead to the burning of his effigy (in a top hat) in a protest in the  capital Ulaanbaatar in April of 2006. And the “Toxic Bob” moniker  Friedland has carried with him since long before his disastrous  Summitville mine in Colorado is now commonly used in Mongolia. By 2008,  Ivanhoe had found a partner in Rio Tinto but the agreement Friedland had  talked up between Ivanhoe and the Mongolian government had failed to  materialize.
Friedland also failed to anticipate approvals by the  Mongolian parliament for windfall taxes on gold and copper exports and  for the government to take up to 50% stakes in certain mining assets.[2]  Amidst global outcry by mining moguls a call went out for political  intervention. According to a cable from the U.S. Embassy in Ulaanbataar  dated January 11, 2008, recently released by Wikileaks, that  intervention was certainly forthcoming.[3]  In January 2008, then-trade minister David Emerson flew into  Ulaanbaatar. While there he expressed concern that Mongolian President  “Enkhbayar’s approach to mining was too statist for Canadian tastes,  saying that Enkhbayar was behind many of the efforts to re-nationalize  Mongolia’s natural resources.”“The Canadian minister, however, praised  Mongolia’s prime minister, foreign minister, and minister of the  interior, saying they agreed nationalization was not the preferred  choice, but that “severe political pressures” and a fear that the  country would not benefit from its natural resources were at play....   Emerson also met with mining companies that “want and need foreign  governments to project a united front to the [Government of Mongolia] to  cover their political flank,” the cable reads. “In short, the mining  companies told Canada to join US, British, Japanese, Australian and  German efforts to encourage (cajole, harangue, etc.) the [Mongolian  government] into staying out of the mining business...” During Emerson’s  visit, Canada and Mongolia announced they would begin negotiating a  Foreign Investment Promotion and Protection Agreement to provide  protection for foreign investors. Later in 2008, Canada opened an  Embassy in Ulanbaatur.
In October 2009 Ivanhoe signed a long-term  investment agreement with the Government of Mongolia, and on March 31,  2010, the Government approved the investment agreement with Ivanhoe and  Rio Tinto for the development of Oyu Tolgoi.
In spite of these  developments, NGOs, whose existence Friedland has somehow failed to  recognize in 2005, have been increasingly vocal in raising social,  environmental as well as political concerns associated with the Oyu  Tolgoi project. “The Mongolian Government approved the Oyu Tolgoi  Investment Agreement on 31st March 2010 without obtaining the prior  consent of Mongolia’s parliament (the State Great Hural) and despite the  fact that the technical and economic feasibility study submitted by  Ivanhoe Mines Mongolia Inc. had been rejected by Mongolia’s Mineral  Expert Council [the technical council that has the responsibility to  approve mining projects]” said Ms. Urantsooj of the Centre for Human  Rights and Development, a NGO which has made a study of Mongolia’s  mining and environmental legislation.[4]
On  April 1, 2010, Mongolian NGO Oyu Tolgoi Watch tabled a complaint with  OECD National Contact Points (NCP) of the U.K. and Canada on behalf of  the Centre for Citizens’ Alliance, the Centre for Human Rights and  Development, Steppes without Borders, Drastic Change Movement, and  National Soyombo Movement.[5]  In brief, the complaint alleges the company’s Technical and Economic  Feasibility Study that was accepted by Mongolia’s Technical Council of  Minerals Experts in March and implemented in April 2010 does not  demonstrate the availability of sufficient water resources to carry out  the project. It also raises issues concerning the long-term commitment  of Ivanhoe Mines to the region and proposed royalty transfers among  owners of the mining licence.[6]
After  a lengthy process of requesting further information and documents from  both sides the Canadian NCP decided not to take the case to the next  stage. In its final statement the NCP determined the “environmental  assessments to be complete and of a high quality” and finding the  “governance and management of the water and all other resources of the  area” to be “the responsibility of the Government of Mongolia.” The NCP  further argued that “it is not practical or realistic to expect these  extensive and complex matters to be resolved by dialogue between NGOs  and companies on a case-by-case basis. These matters are more  appropriately addressed by the national government using a comprehensive  governance mechanism with appropriate laws, regulations and enforcement  mechanisms.”
This finding is remarkable for at least two  reasons. Firstly, the Canadian NCP made a statement of fact about the  quality of Ivanhoe’s environmental assessment. The Canadian NCP normally  takes the position that it will not make determinations of fact  regarding the validity of a complaint but rather seeks to offer its  “good offices” to bring about dialogue between the parties. The fact  that the Canadian NCP determined that dialogue could not be expected to  resolve these issues, and that they be best handled by the Mongolian  government, is the second remarkable finding. As noted elsewhere in this  newsletter, non-judicial grievance mechanisms such as the NCP are  touted by U.N. Special representative John Ruggie as an effective  response to weak governance. It is hard to see how non-judicial  grievance mechanisms can fill the void left by weak governance if they  refuse to accept that role. The question of whether there was a conflict  of interest given that the complaint came in to the Canadian NCP at the  same time that Ivanhoe was seeking funding from Export Development  Canada is pertinent in this case.
Not long after the Canadian NCP  prepared its final statement on the Oyu Tolgoi complaint, the  International Finance Corporation (IFC) replied to a letter of concern  by Oyu Tolgoi Watch.[7]  The IFC’s letter confirms many of the very concerns regarding the lack  of adequate environmental assessment, particularly with respect to water  resources and social impacts, that were raised in Oyu Tolgoi Watch’s  complaint to Canada’s National Contact Point. The financial institution  insists it is “deeply committed to helping the Oyu Tolgoi project  develop in a manner that will maximize its benefits to the people of  Mongolia.” The question is whether the IFC’s stated commitment to  achieving benefits for the Mongolian people is more believable than the  less politically smooth, but perhaps more honestly rapacious statements  of Friedland when he described the Oyu Tolgoi project as a “cash  machine” for investors and shareholders.
source: miningwatch.ca 


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