AVZ Discussion 2022

Mute22

Regular
I feel your statement is a bit irresponsable mate.
If he is correct, he probably shouldn't be saying anything at such a sensitive time.

If he is postulating, then he's giving false hope which is worse.

Of course I am hungry to know answers, but either way I don't think it's appropriate to post.
 
  • Like
  • Thinking
Reactions: 13 users

Scoota30

Regular
well geo, I hope you're right but I wont hold my breath, we all know it must end one day though, just hope its before I'm dead. if rio are still after assets like simon moores thinks, then hopefully they're in discussions with avz and the drc.

View attachment 70644
That is a very interesting post from someone like Simon..... "quality assets - battery grade...big assets... be number one"

i think not coincidence GIF
 
  • Thinking
  • Like
Reactions: 10 users

rocknrolla

Regular
Just seeing when the last formal communication from AVZ with everyone one. Mine was 26/9, have I missed anything?
 
  • Like
Reactions: 2 users

Winenut

Go AVZ!
Surely you can wait few weeks for your answer, then you will hopefully be jumping with joy.

Prick-tease....

I'd usually post a funny gif but the google search went way weird on me.....:rolleyes:
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 2 users

Xerof

Biding my Time 1971
tease teasing GIF
Top Rank Fight GIF by Top Rank Boxing


This’ll do Wino
 
  • Haha
Reactions: 4 users

Remark

Top 20
Surely you can wait few weeks for your answer, then you will hopefully be jumping with joy.
Heard the same rumor recently and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that....
 
  • Like
  • Haha
  • Sad
Reactions: 26 users

protoje

Regular
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 2 users

Rediah

Regular
  • Like
  • Haha
Reactions: 4 users

Mr_Tones83

Regular
1000019068.gif
 
  • Like
  • Haha
Reactions: 7 users

Winenut

Go AVZ!
Surely you can wait few weeks for your answer, then you will hopefully be jumping with joy.
The only thing that will make me jump for joy is $2+ guaranteed fucking tomorrow.....
 
  • Like
  • Fire
  • Love
Reactions: 28 users

Xerof

Biding my Time 1971
Heard the same rumor recently and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that, and the time before that....
you forgot the other 2 times before that
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 14 users

Bin59

Regular


Congo Wants to Pivot Away From China’s Dominance Over Its Mining​

Michael J. Kavanagh and William Clowes
Thu, October 10, 2024 at 4:36 AM GMT+113 min read
423955d4740be4b1c8936b5d518853b9

(Bloomberg) -- Democratic Republic of Congo’s top mining official said the country is courting new investors for its world-class deposits of key metals as it looks to diversify ownership in its industry, which is currently dominated by China.

The plan includes streamlining processes to pay customs and taxes, along with a partnership with the United Arab Emirates, Mines Minister Kizito Pakabomba said in an interview. The nation is also planning to revamp a railway that can be used to transport minerals so cargoes can be more easily exported from a port along the Atlantic Ocean, positioned closer to US and European markets, he said.

Congo wants to “attract better investors, more investors and diversified investors,” Pakabomba said.

The ambitions come as the country continues to play a key role in international metals markets, while also finding itself at the center of a contest between China, the US and other countries vying for access to critical minerals. Congo recently overtook Peru to become the second-largest producer of copper and is by far the world’s biggest source of cobalt. Both commodities are key to the global energy transition.

The government is looking to make “strategic choices” about who runs Congo’s mines, the minister said, citing this year’s example of the state’s decision to oppose a proposed sale of Trafigura Group-backed copper and cobalt miner Chemaf Resources Ltd. to China’s Norin Mining Ltd.

“We’ve stopped this transaction,” Pakabomba said. If Chemaf remains set upon an ownership change, “we’ll consider with them the different options that could be taken,” he said.

Congo’s government has grown increasingly frustrated by its lack of influence over its mining industry, particularly in cobalt, a key ingredient in many electric-vehicle batteries. The country accounted for about three-quarters of global output of the metal last year, but a spike in production by miners in the nation — particularly China’s CMOC Ltd. — has pushed prices to eight-year lows.

The government is considering multiple options to have more control over cobalt exports, Pakabomba said.

Pakabomba also said that the country’s railway project is a big part of its strategy for the industry.

The government is evaluating how to improve a railway from the mining hub of Kolwezi to Congo’s border with Angola, which would then connect to a line terminating at the port of Lobito on the Atlantic Ocean, Pakabomba said.

The US has already committed $553 million to refurbish the Angolan section of the railway.
Congo’s foreign minister, Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, told Bloomberg that the country was considering a tender process to rebuild the Congolese side of the railway.
“I think that there are a lot of companies that are already lining up” with the project in mind, she said.

The rail-improvement project would cost $245 million over the first two years of construction, Pakabomba said.
“It will allow us to diversify the different export routes so that we are not only toward the East,” he said.
 
  • Like
  • Haha
  • Fire
Reactions: 22 users

j.l

Regular


Congo Wants to Pivot Away From China’s Dominance Over Its Mining​

Michael J. Kavanagh and William Clowes
Thu, October 10, 2024 at 4:36 AM GMT+113 min read
423955d4740be4b1c8936b5d518853b9

(Bloomberg) -- Democratic Republic of Congo’s top mining official said the country is courting new investors for its world-class deposits of key metals as it looks to diversify ownership in its industry, which is currently dominated by China.

The plan includes streamlining processes to pay customs and taxes, along with a partnership with the United Arab Emirates, Mines Minister Kizito Pakabomba said in an interview. The nation is also planning to revamp a railway that can be used to transport minerals so cargoes can be more easily exported from a port along the Atlantic Ocean, positioned closer to US and European markets, he said.

Congo wants to “attract better investors, more investors and diversified investors,” Pakabomba said.

The ambitions come as the country continues to play a key role in international metals markets, while also finding itself at the center of a contest between China, the US and other countries vying for access to critical minerals. Congo recently overtook Peru to become the second-largest producer of copper and is by far the world’s biggest source of cobalt. Both commodities are key to the global energy transition.

The government is looking to make “strategic choices” about who runs Congo’s mines, the minister said, citing this year’s example of the state’s decision to oppose a proposed sale of Trafigura Group-backed copper and cobalt miner Chemaf Resources Ltd. to China’s Norin Mining Ltd.

“We’ve stopped this transaction,” Pakabomba said. If Chemaf remains set upon an ownership change, “we’ll consider with them the different options that could be taken,” he said.

Congo’s government has grown increasingly frustrated by its lack of influence over its mining industry, particularly in cobalt, a key ingredient in many electric-vehicle batteries. The country accounted for about three-quarters of global output of the metal last year, but a spike in production by miners in the nation — particularly China’s CMOC Ltd. — has pushed prices to eight-year lows.

The government is considering multiple options to have more control over cobalt exports, Pakabomba said.

Pakabomba also said that the country’s railway project is a big part of its strategy for the industry.

The government is evaluating how to improve a railway from the mining hub of Kolwezi to Congo’s border with Angola, which would then connect to a line terminating at the port of Lobito on the Atlantic Ocean, Pakabomba said.

The US has already committed $553 million to refurbish the Angolan section of the railway.
Congo’s foreign minister, Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, told Bloomberg that the country was considering a tender process to rebuild the Congolese side of the railway.
“I think that there are a lot of companies that are already lining up” with the project in mind, she said.

The rail-improvement project would cost $245 million over the first two years of construction, Pakabomba said.
“It will allow us to diversify the different export routes so that we are not only toward the East,” he said.
The Friday funnies are a day early this week.
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 10 users


Congo Wants to Pivot Away From China’s Dominance Over Its Mining​

Michael J. Kavanagh and William Clowes
Thu, October 10, 2024 at 4:36 AM GMT+113 min read
423955d4740be4b1c8936b5d518853b9

(Bloomberg) -- Democratic Republic of Congo’s top mining official said the country is courting new investors for its world-class deposits of key metals as it looks to diversify ownership in its industry, which is currently dominated by China.

The plan includes streamlining processes to pay customs and taxes, along with a partnership with the United Arab Emirates, Mines Minister Kizito Pakabomba said in an interview. The nation is also planning to revamp a railway that can be used to transport minerals so cargoes can be more easily exported from a port along the Atlantic Ocean, positioned closer to US and European markets, he said.

Congo wants to “attract better investors, more investors and diversified investors,” Pakabomba said.

The ambitions come as the country continues to play a key role in international metals markets, while also finding itself at the center of a contest between China, the US and other countries vying for access to critical minerals. Congo recently overtook Peru to become the second-largest producer of copper and is by far the world’s biggest source of cobalt. Both commodities are key to the global energy transition.

The government is looking to make “strategic choices” about who runs Congo’s mines, the minister said, citing this year’s example of the state’s decision to oppose a proposed sale of Trafigura Group-backed copper and cobalt miner Chemaf Resources Ltd. to China’s Norin Mining Ltd.

“We’ve stopped this transaction,” Pakabomba said. If Chemaf remains set upon an ownership change, “we’ll consider with them the different options that could be taken,” he said.

Congo’s government has grown increasingly frustrated by its lack of influence over its mining industry, particularly in cobalt, a key ingredient in many electric-vehicle batteries. The country accounted for about three-quarters of global output of the metal last year, but a spike in production by miners in the nation — particularly China’s CMOC Ltd. — has pushed prices to eight-year lows.

The government is considering multiple options to have more control over cobalt exports, Pakabomba said.

Pakabomba also said that the country’s railway project is a big part of its strategy for the industry.

The government is evaluating how to improve a railway from the mining hub of Kolwezi to Congo’s border with Angola, which would then connect to a line terminating at the port of Lobito on the Atlantic Ocean, Pakabomba said.

The US has already committed $553 million to refurbish the Angolan section of the railway.
Congo’s foreign minister, Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, told Bloomberg that the country was considering a tender process to rebuild the Congolese side of the railway.
“I think that there are a lot of companies that are already lining up” with the project in mind, she said.

The rail-improvement project would cost $245 million over the first two years of construction, Pakabomba said.
“It will allow us to diversify the different export routes so that we are not only toward the East,” he said.
1ae8bcdcef865fe7a50e34148c8cb1ce.jpg
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 16 users

Doc

Master of Quan


Congo Wants to Pivot Away From China’s Dominance Over Its Mining​

Michael J. Kavanagh and William Clowes
Thu, October 10, 2024 at 4:36 AM GMT+113 min read
423955d4740be4b1c8936b5d518853b9

(Bloomberg) -- Democratic Republic of Congo’s top mining official said the country is courting new investors for its world-class deposits of key metals as it looks to diversify ownership in its industry, which is currently dominated by China.

The plan includes streamlining processes to pay customs and taxes, along with a partnership with the United Arab Emirates, Mines Minister Kizito Pakabomba said in an interview. The nation is also planning to revamp a railway that can be used to transport minerals so cargoes can be more easily exported from a port along the Atlantic Ocean, positioned closer to US and European markets, he said.

Congo wants to “attract better investors, more investors and diversified investors,” Pakabomba said.

The ambitions come as the country continues to play a key role in international metals markets, while also finding itself at the center of a contest between China, the US and other countries vying for access to critical minerals. Congo recently overtook Peru to become the second-largest producer of copper and is by far the world’s biggest source of cobalt. Both commodities are key to the global energy transition.

The government is looking to make “strategic choices” about who runs Congo’s mines, the minister said, citing this year’s example of the state’s decision to oppose a proposed sale of Trafigura Group-backed copper and cobalt miner Chemaf Resources Ltd. to China’s Norin Mining Ltd.

“We’ve stopped this transaction,” Pakabomba said. If Chemaf remains set upon an ownership change, “we’ll consider with them the different options that could be taken,” he said.

Congo’s government has grown increasingly frustrated by its lack of influence over its mining industry, particularly in cobalt, a key ingredient in many electric-vehicle batteries. The country accounted for about three-quarters of global output of the metal last year, but a spike in production by miners in the nation — particularly China’s CMOC Ltd. — has pushed prices to eight-year lows.

The government is considering multiple options to have more control over cobalt exports, Pakabomba said.

Pakabomba also said that the country’s railway project is a big part of its strategy for the industry.

The government is evaluating how to improve a railway from the mining hub of Kolwezi to Congo’s border with Angola, which would then connect to a line terminating at the port of Lobito on the Atlantic Ocean, Pakabomba said.

The US has already committed $553 million to refurbish the Angolan section of the railway.
Congo’s foreign minister, Therese Kayikwamba Wagner, told Bloomberg that the country was considering a tender process to rebuild the Congolese side of the railway.
“I think that there are a lot of companies that are already lining up” with the project in mind, she said.

The rail-improvement project would cost $245 million over the first two years of construction, Pakabomba said.
“It will allow us to diversify the different export routes so that we are not only toward the East,” he said.

1728538780082.gif
 
  • Haha
  • Like
  • Fire
Reactions: 9 users

Flight996

Regular

masturbation im horny GIF
 
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 8 users
Gee the clown car of morons spreading constant AVZ hate have gone real quiet the last few days. Nada from tolate, lars or stonewalll. Has the money dried up or are they all enjoying a succulent chinese meal somewhere working on their talking points for the upcoming vote?
Surely you can wait few weeks for your answer, then you will hopefully be jumping with joy.
Perhaps these occurrences are linked

This is just speculation from me and no one should make any more out of my guess other than whenever someone has pointed out the haters are being silent they are usually back online trolling us within hours but it is potentially interesting that tolate and the other lemmings have all gone quiet while geo is hinting at a resolution in a few weeks

I guess tim will tell
 
  • Like
  • Thinking
Reactions: 20 users

Mute22

Regular
  • Haha
  • Like
Reactions: 12 users

j.l

Regular
Tim is going to get a serious water boarding some day. The amount of shit he has to tell...
 
  • Haha
  • Like
  • Fire
Reactions: 6 users
Top Bottom