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China's CITIC Ltd
reported a HK$1 billion ($129 million) half-year loss on its Australian iron ore
operation, which shipped its first ore in December but is still struggling to
get the first of six production lines working well.
The $9.6 billion Sino Iron project, China's biggest overseas mining investment,
has sold 1.4 million tonnes of iron ore so far, after starting exports more than
three years behind schedule and nearly four times over budget.
It is a long way from reaching its planned capacity of 24 million tonnes a year.
"Operationally, production line one has been producing quality iron ore
concentrate. However, it has yet to reach the desired capacity," CITIC Chairman
Chang Zhenming said in a letter to shareholders released with the group's
results.
Sino Iron's second unit is in trial production and the remaining four lines are
under construction, he said. The first-half loss on the project was in line with
the loss booked a year earlier.
CITIC, previously called CITIC Pacific before absorbing its state-owned parent
CITIC Group's assets this year, has been fighting lawsuits launched by
Australian billionaire politician Clive Palmer over royalties owed on the Sino
Iron project and control of its export port for more than a year.
The battle with Palmer, whose company Mineralogy sold the rights to the project
to CITIC in 2006, has escalated into public brawling this year, with Palmer
accusing China last week on television of trying to steal Australia's resources
and calling the Chinese "bastards".
He wrote an apology to China's ambassador to Australia this week, saying he only
meant to attack CITIC Pacific.
Chang did not mention the dispute with Palmer in his letter to shareholders, but
the results statement touched on the legal dispute with Mineralogy.
Palmer has lost two cases in the past month concerning control over the export
port, Cape Preston.
The fight is now centred on how to resolve the calculation of royalties owed.
Palmer wants it to be decided by an external expert, while CITIC wants a court
to rule on the issue.
Source: Rueters
Related links:
China CITIC Pacific's Sino Iron Ore Project Report HK$1.6 Billion Loss In 2013
(2014-02-25)
CITIC Pacific Loads First Australian Iron Ore Cargo (2013-12-12)
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