Petaquilla, Modern Mining



Posts Tagged ‘copper’

Petaquilla Minerals – Update, Panama Gold

Tuesday, August 31st, 2010

Robert Henriquez, Panama’s Minister of Commerce and Industry,  endorses Petaquilla’s Molejon mine as a model for future mining ventures in his country, including Inmet’s nearby prospective $4 billion Cobre porphyry copper-gold deposit 20 km south of the Caribbean shore in Colon province.

Penonome & Panama City, Panama – In the 50 years following Christopher Columbus’s accidental discovery of the Americas, Spaniards hauled some 21 tonnes of gold out of the east-west isthmus of what is now called Panama. There ended, by AD 1550, Panama’s mining industry. Her dense jungles, populated by snakes and bugs and panthers, and overburdened with mud so slick and greasy you can bury a Land Cruiser in, forbade future prospecting.

Fast-forward 460 years, and Panama is back in the gold-mining game. Petaquilla Minerals, Ltd. (TSX: PTQ) entered gold production this year at its 2,200 tonne/day Molejon open-pit mine north of Penonome, the first of several new precious and strategic metals projects on Panama’s plate.

“Panama lies on a bed of copper and gold,” Robert Henriquez, Panama’s Minister of Commerce and Industry, told us in a recent interview in his Panama City office. “We feel that mining is an area of great potential for us.” He endorses Petaquilla’s Molejon mine as a model for future mining ventures in his country, including Inmet’s (TSX:IMN) nearby prospective $4 billion Cobre porphyry copper-gold deposit 20 km south of the Caribbean shore in Colon province. “They are doing a very nice job and we support their project.”

Forget what you think you know about Panama. Bananas, notes Henriquez, account for just $150 million of Panama’s $25 billion gross national product. The nation’s debt rating was upgraded to Investment Grade status earlier this year by Fitch, Moody, and S&P, joining Mexico, Brazil and Chile in the BBB-minus category. Panama grew its economy even in the depths of the global recession and its jobless rate peaked at 6.4 per cent, versus the 10 per cent in the U.S. and 20 per cent in Spain.

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Petaquilla – Article, What’s your pick on the next emerging market?

Saturday, August 21st, 2010

A pro-business government that has a pro mining vision, granted Petaquilla, the approval to move their 100% owned Molejón Gold Project into Commercial Production

August 16, 2010.

Luigi A. Jimenez H. – Financial Advisor

After what the market has been exposed in the last year with the bankruptcy of major banks and corporations. Investors are more cautious than before on where to put their savings.

It’s my opinion that the technology sector is going through a warping phase, which could lead to a future potential performance. Historically in the past year it has grown +14.63% overall. Technology is improving enormously, if we think we’ve seen it all, we will be amazed from all the new gadgets that 2011 will bring.

Another area that I foresee that could have great potential in the following years is the commodities market, having an overall growth of +5.2% in the last year. Within the commodities gold has had great acceptance with a +11.56% growth and safety sentiment attached to it. This has opened the window for emerging small cap gold companies looking to move their projects into production and also emerging gold producers to become attractive for a long term investment opportunity.

Locations like Latin American have become targets for juniors to explore. Panama for example, recently granted BBB- investment grade by Fitch, with an emerging economy and a pro-business government that has a pro mining vision, granted Petaquilla Minerals, Ltd. (TSX: PTQ), the approval to move their 100% owned Molejón Gold Project into Commercial Production, becoming the pioneers of modern mining in Panama. Richard Fifer is one of the Directors and founder of this project, along with Joao Manuel current President and CEO are looking to expand their current potential. Other projects of great importance within Panama are INMET Mining (TSX: IMN) flagship Petaquilla Copper Project that should be in production by 2014, leading the way for the future tenure of Cerro Colorado Copper Project currently owned by the government. Other countries with great potential are Colombia, Nicaragua and Costa Rica.

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