Friday, August 17, 2012

Mine firm eyes Sarangani for docking facilities

By Bong S. Sarmiento
Friday, August 17, 2012
KORONADAL CITY -- Foreign-backed Sagittarius Mines Inc. is considering Maasim town in Sarangani as a potential site for its coal-fired power plant and port facilities in support of its Tampakan copper-gold project, a company official confirmed on Wednesday.
John Arnaldo, Sagittarius Mines external communications and media relations manager, said they started early this week the public consultation for its off-lease infrastructure projects that also include the concentrate pipeline and the filter plant.
Sagittarius Mines earlier identified Malalag town in Davao del Sur province as the site of its power plant and port facilities.
"Maasim is now part of the option, although we are not abandoning Malalag. What we are doing is assessing which is the best option," Arnaldo said after the company launched its interactive Community Information Resource Center here.
Maasim is also the site of the $450 million, 200-megawatt (MW) coal-fired power plant of the Alcantara-led Sarangani Energy Corp., which is now gearing for the construction phase.
The town hosts one of the country’s best scuba diving spots, and critics, including the local Catholic Church, have feared that a coal power plant would destroy the diverse marine ecosystem and will endanger human health.
Sources said that officials from Sagittarius Mines have been holding meetings in Maasim town in line with its planned infrastructure projects there.
Sagittarius Mines said it needs some 500MW to support its Tampakan copper-gold project. At least $900 million has been allotted for this dedicated power station.
The company plans to go on commercial stream but the environment code of South Cotabato that bans open pit mining poses a hindrance to this target.
Sagittarius Mines’ application for an environmental compliance certificate (ECC) had been trashed by the Department of Environment and Natural Resources (DENR), as well as its ensuing appeal for reconsideration, on the basis of the open-pit ban.
The company has already appealed the DENR decision to the Office of the President.
Arnaldo said they have started the public scoping or consultation as part of the firm’s environmental impact assessment (EIA) for the firm’s off-lease facilities.
The EIA will be part of the document that will be submitted when the mining company applies for a separate ECC for its off-lease infrastructure projects.
From the mining site in Tampakan, South Cotabato, Arnaldo said they will build an underground pipeline that would ferry the minerals towards Maasim for loading to the ships.
Alongside the pipeline, which will be a meter deep from the surface, will be the transmission lines of the power plant, he added.
This would span a length of 100 kilometers, Arnaldo said.
The Tampakan project is touted as the largest known undeveloped copper and gold reserve in Southeast Asia.
The estimated copper reserve at Tampakan in total resources has risen from 13.9 million metric tons to 15 million MT while estimated contained gold has risen from 16.2 million ounces to 17.9 Moz, according to a company study.
Published in the Sun.Star Davao newspaper on August 17, 2012.     source

No comments:

Post a Comment