Publicly listed Indonesian tin mining company PT Timah says it will
establish two subsidiaries to support its operations in Myanmar.
PT
Timah president director Sukrisno said one subsidiary would operate the
firm’s tin mine in Tanithary province in Myanmar and the other would
market its tin produced in Myanmar.
“We expect the two new
business units, which will be fully owned by Timah, to begin operations
in 2014,” Sukrisno said in Jakarta.
Timah, according to
Sukrisno, expected to start exploration in Myanmar in June. The firm is
currently processing needed permits.
“There are several steps
before we can really start exploring reserves there. Right now, the
focus is to obtain all necessary permits from the local government in
accordance with their mining procedures,” he said.
In November, Timah secured a concession in Pubyien-Tamok in Myeik, Tanithary, from Myanmar’s energy ministry.
The
company has allocated US$18 million to develop the 10,000-hectare site
over a three-year period, expecting to produce 10,000 tons of tin per
year from the mine, which would make the firm the largest tin producer
in the world.
The cost of the firm’s expansion plans into Myanmar would be sourced internally, Sukrisno said.
He
added that Timah might receive offers of financial assistance from
other institutions if it could collect dependable data on the
concession’s tin reserves.
Timah’s plans in Myanmar were part of
efforts to increase the firm’s tin reserves, as its reserves from
concessions in Bangka and Belitung islands have started to lessen
significantly.
The firm would also consider building a smelter in Myanmar, Sukrisno said.
Timah
will operate its concession in Myanmar mine under a production sharing
contract. The company has envisioned reaping 80 percent of the
production with the remainder going to the Myanmar government. The firm
is currently still waiting for the local government’s response to its
proposal.
When asked about his expectations for tin prices this
year, Sukrisno said he hoped the commodity’s price would increase to
between $25,000 and $30,000 per ton.
Tin prices have been
hovering about $24,000 per ton as of January, up from the all-year
average price of $21,000 per ton for 2012.
“We don’t have any plan to boost production, as tin prices are still changing,” he said.
Timah
has said that it wants to produce 30,000 tons of tin this year, which
would be up from the 29,600 tons it produced in 2012.
Timah
(TINS) is one of several Indonesian state-owned corporations that have
eyed expanding their business into neighboring Southeast Asian
countries.
The other firms include publicly listed cement
producer PT Semen Gresik (SMGR), telecommunications company PT Telkom
Indonesia (TLKM).
Indonesian state oil and gas firm PT Pertamina has also pondered expanding its business in the Southeast Asia region.
Sukrisno said previously that Timah would also cut costs to boost earnings.
“We want to press down costs from between $16,000 and $18,000 per metric ton on average to below $15,000 next year,” he said.
The
company is expecting to operate a modified dredging ship converted from
a bucket line dredger to a bucket wheel dredger (BWD), which would be
able to operate in waters up to 70 meters deep with a lower cost of
production and power consumption and higher productivity.
Only
seven out of its 11 BLDs are currently in operation. A BWD dredger uses
new technology that enables it to carry out mining activities at a depth
of up to 70 meters. The BWD ship’s dredging capacity is two times
higher than that of BLDs.
The BWD is one of the company’s
development projects. Timah will develop two more BWDs next year after
it reviews the operation of the first BWD.
Timah is also planning
to develop an industrial zone in Bangka Belitung, which will host a tin
chemical processing facility and other concerns, including coal power
plant project.
source: The Jakarta Post
http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2013/02/02/timah-set-two-subsidiaries-myanmar.html
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