Ramu Nickel Mine – Arguments Against Uprooting Our People
• June 11, 2010 • 1 CommentPosted in PNG & China, PNG Conservation, PNG Economy, PNG Mining, PNG Sustainability
Tags: Basamuk, Basamuk Refinery, Development, Documentary, Film, Interface, Land Tenure, Landowner, Madang, MCC, MCC Ramu, MCC Ramu NiCo Ltd, Pacific, Papua New Guinea, PC, PNG, PNG Landowners, Political Correctness, Ramu, Ramu Nickel, Ray Anderson, SoulPNG, Western
Will Land Reform in PNG Lead to Foreign Direct ‘Invasion’?
• April 8, 2009 • 7 CommentsPosted in PNG Business, PNG Economy, PNG Politics, PNG Sustainability
Tags: Abu Dhabi Fund for Development, Abu Dhabi Investors, Agricultural Land, Aid Watch, Alienated Land, Basmati Rice, Business Groups Incorporation Act 1974, Cambodia Rice Fields, Capital, China, Corn, Corporations, Customary Land, Daewoo Logistics, Developing Countries, Development, Economic Growth, Economics, Egypt, Entrepreneurship, Farmland, FDI, Food Supplies, Foreign Direct Investment, Foreign Investor, Freehold Land, Government, Indonesia, Industrialisation, Julian Borger, Khalifa bin Zayed, Kuwait, Labour, Lae, Land, Land (Ownership of Freeholds) Act 1976, Land Economics, Laos, Libya, Long and Medium Term Development Strategy, Madagascar, MTDS, National Land Development Taskforce, National Land Summit Report, National Lands Development Programme, Neo-Colonialism, NGO Submission, NLDP, Pakistan, Palm Oil, Papua New Guinea, Plantations, PNG, PNG 2009 Budget, Private Sector, Programmes, Qatar, Registered, Resources, Rising Food Prices, Saudi Binladin Group, Scramble for Africa, Sir Michael Somare, Somare-Temu, South African Workforce, South Korea, South-East Asia, Suadanese Agriculture, The Guardian, Traditional Land, Traditional Law, Trend, UAE, Ukrainian Farmland
PNG Tourism Records 6 Years of Positive Growth
• February 4, 2009 • 1 CommentPosted in PNG Tourism
Tags: Arrivals, Business, Climate, Crisis, Culture Visits, Development, Diving, Experience, Garamut, Holidays, Marketing, New Guinea, Numbers, Papua New Guinea, PNG, PNG Tourism, PNG Tourism Promotion Authority, PNGTPA, Trekking, World Economics
The PNG Economy and the Risk of “Dutch Disease”
• November 27, 2008 • 6 CommentsPosted in PNG Economy
Tags: Boom, Central, Commodities, Developing States, Development, Discovery, Dutch Disease, Earnings, Economic Reforms, Economies, Economy, Efficient, Exchange Rate, Exports, Gas, Governance, Government, Growth, Manufacturing, Minerals, Natural Gas, Natural Resources, Netherlands, Oil, Oligarchs, Operations, Papua New Guinea, Paradox, Plenty, PNG, Production, Renaissance, Revenue, Sector, The Economist, Theory, Third World, Threat, Tradable
An Independent Evaluation of Deep-Sea Mine Tailings Placement (DSTP) in PNG
• August 30, 2008 • Leave a CommentPosted in PNG Conservation, PNG Mining
Tags: 8th Development Fund, Association, Australia, Benthic, Best Practice, Biological, Companies, Compilation, Conservation, Deep, Deep-Sea, Department of Environment Conservation, Development, Dr Tracy Shimmield, DSTP, Economic, Education, Employment, Environment, EU, European Union, Evaluate, Evaluation, Fund, Geochemical, Government, Guidelines, Industry, Infrastructure, Institutes, Interests, International, Investication, Knowledge, Lihir, Maintenance, Management, Marine, Mine, Mineral, Mining, Misima, Monitoring, MSSP, Nekton, Oceanographic, Operations, Organisation, Papua New Guinea, Placement, Plankton, PNG, PNG Mining, Policy, Poverty, Practices, Production, Programme, Project, Research, Science, Scotland, Scottish, Scottish Association for Marine Science, Sea, Sector, Sedimentological, Sir John Murray, Support, Tailings, Transfer, Waste, World
PNG – Full of Kokodas but Where the Bloody Hell are Australians?
• August 29, 2008 • 2 CommentsPosted in PNG Conservation, PNG Mining
Tags: Angabanga River, Aquifers, Astrolabe, Australia, Barrick, Bay, BHP, Biodiversity, Bougainville, Burial, Campaign, Central Province, Chemicals, Community, Companies, Coordinator, Coral, Cultural, Decision, Development, Director, Disposal, Downstream, Drainage, DRD Gold, Drinking, Dumps, Economic, Emperor Gold, Enga Province, Environment, Federal, Fish, Fishing, Fly River, Force, Forests, Fund, Gardens, Global, Government, Health, Holdings, Hunting, Indonesia, Industry, Island, Kilometers, Kokoda, Kokoda Track, Landowners, Lihir, Local, Malnutrition, Marine, Metals, Mine, Mineral Policy Institute, Mining, Misima, MPI, Mt Fublian, Norwegian, Ok Tedi, Papua New Guinea, Pension, Perth, Petromin, PNG, Poison, Porgera, Province, Ramu Nickel, Reef, Research, Resource Depletion, Resources, Sacred, Security, Sites, Spiritual, Subsistence, System, Tailings, Techa Beaumont, Tolukuma, Torres Strait, Tourism, Toxic, Traditional, Tuna, Villagers, Wastes, Water, Waterway, Waterways, Western, Western Province
The Papua New Guinea National Maritime Safety Authority: A Ship with a Hole?
• August 26, 2008 • 13 CommentsPosted in PNG Shipping, PNG Transportation
Tags: Accountability, Act, Authority, Aviation, Bismark Maritime, Bismark Shipping, Board, Buoy, Central, Certification, Chairman, Chris Rupen, Civil, Coastal Shipping, Commercial, Commission, Company, Control, Corporate, Development, Disaster, Dock, Don Polye, Doug Reid, Economy, Efficiency, Engine, Environment, Filipino, Gazette, Governance, Government, Hamish Sharp, Harbour, Incident, Industry, International, Island, Kandep, Lae, Light, Limited, Local, Lutheran, Mailu, Marine, Maritime, Michael Kasi, Michael Somare, Milne Bay, Minister, MV, MV Sealark, National, Navigational, NMSA, NMSA Act 2003, Oil Spill, Ombudsman, Opposition, Pacific, Pacific Register of Ships Limited, Papua New Guinea, Papua New Guinea National Maritime Safety Authority, Parliament, Passenger, Peter Sharp, PNG, PNG Media, PNG Ports Corporation, PNG Shipping, Pollution, Prime Minister, PRS, Rabaul, Rabaul Shipping, Register, Regulations, Rules, Safety, San Pedro, Sealark, Service, Sharp, Ship, Shipping, Sir Michael Somare, Standards, Starships, State, Statutory, Sunk, Sustainability, The National, Transparency, Transportation, Vessels, Warrant, Water, Zone
Your Comments