Magnetite Should Be Excluded From Mine Tax Regime -Gindalbie
July 02 2010 - 4:09AM
Dow Jones News
Magnetite producers should be exempt from paying the Australian
government's Minerals Resource Rent Tax, Gindalbie Metals Ltd.
(GBG.AU) Chief Executive Garret Dixon said Friday.
The industry was the only part of Australia's mining sector
affected by the tax that was not represented at the talks, Dixon
said.
"We see this as a tax negotiated by the big companies for the
big companies," he said. "We hope this has been an oversight and we
look forward to being exempted."
Magnetite is a lower-grade form of iron ore that needs to be
processed to reach marketable form, as opposed to the more common
hematite which accounts for the overwhelming majority of the
Australian iron ore industry.
BHP Billiton Ltd. (BHP.AU), Rio Tinto Ltd. (RIO.AU) and Xstrata
Plc (XTA.LN), which led negotiations with the government over the
tax, do not have significant magnetite operations in Australia.
"The big iron ore miners just dig up the product, crush it and
sell it, but we start with something that's less valuable than
gravel and then have to concentrate it to end up with a high-grade
product," said Dixon.
Other magnetite miners likely to be affected by the tax include
Grange Resources Ltd. (GRR.AU) and steel producer OneSteel Ltd.
(OST.AU).
The government is yet to produce a firm definition of the mine
gate point at which the tax will be applied.
A decision on that issue would help determine the profitability
of magnetite miners after the tax.
-By David Fickling, Dow Jones Newswires; +61 2 8272 4689;
david.fickling@dowjones.com
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