Donner metals
Company type | Public (TSX: DON) |
---|---|
Industry | Mining |
Founded | 1996 |
Headquarters | Vancouver, Canada |
Key people | David Patterson, Chairman Harvey Keats, CEO Robin Adair, VP Exploration |
Products | Zinc, Copper, Gold, Silver |
Website | www.donnermetals.com |
Donner Metals Ltd. (TSX: DON) is a Canadian advanced exploration company, listed on the TSX Venture Exchange. Its headquarters are in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Donner's principal project is a 50-50 joint venture with Xstrata Zinc Canada in Matagami, Quebec.[1]
History
The Company was founded in 1926 in Switzerland as Südelektra, an infrastructure and electricity projects concern operating in Latin America.[2] In the 1990's it diversified into mining and disposed of its non-core buinesses.[2]
It was first listed on the London Stock Exchange in 2002 at which time it acquired Glencore's coal assets in Australia and South Africa.[2]
In 2003, it doubled in size with the A$2.9 billion takeover of Australian copper, zinc and coal miner MIM Holdings.[3] But it failed in a 2005 bid for another Australian miner, WMC Resources, which was captured by BHP Billiton, the world's biggest mining company.[4]
In August 2005, Xstrata purchased a 19.9% stake in Falconbridge Limited, a diversified Canadian mining company producing copper, nickel, aluminum and zinc. Following a contested take-over battle with Inco Limited, Xstrata successfully acquired the remaining 80.1% of Falconbridge in August 2006.[5]
In 2006, The Northern Territory and Australian Governments approved the expansion of the McArthur River Mine, near the popular fishing destination of Borrooloola. The expansion involves diversion of the river to a new 5.5km channel, to allow construction of a massive open-cut pit in the existing river.[6] On behalf of the Traditional Owners of the region - the Yanyuwa, Mara, Garrawa and Gurdanji peoples - the Northern Land Council launched a legal challenge to the Northern Territory Government’s decision to approve the mining of and diversion of the McArthur River. On 1 May 2007, The Northern Territory Supreme Court ruled in favour of the Northern Land Council to stop the expansion. On 3 May 2007, the Northern Territory government rushed through retrospective legislation to overrule the court decision and allow the open-cut mine to proceed.[7]
In 2007 Xstrata Coal, based in Sydney, bought Anvil Hill Coal Mine from Centennial Coal Company.[8]
Operations
Since the turn of the millennium it has developed from a small player into one of the world's largest diversified mining groups with the help of a series of large acquisitions. It has major operations/projects in eighteen countries (Australia, Argentina, Brazil, Canada, Chile, Colombia, the Dominican Republic, Germany, Jamaica, New Caledonia, Norway, Papua New Guinea, Peru, South Africa, Spain, Tanzania, the United States and the United Kingdom) and it is a major producer of copper, coking coal, thermal coal, nickel, ferrochrome, vanadium and zinc. It has smaller scale involvement in aluminum, gold, lead and silver.
Relationship with Xstrata
Xstrata is also noted for its association with the commodity trader Glencore, whom media reports accuse of having entered into illegal deals with
References
- ^ Exploration
- ^ a b c Xstrata History
- ^ Xstrata to buy Australian rival
- ^ BHP trumps Xstrata's WMC bid
- ^ Xstrata wins Falconbridge battle
- ^ ECNT (January 19, 2007). "McArthur River expansion". ECNT.
- ^ Murray McLaughlin (May 7, 2007). "Martin under fire from Indigenous parliamentarians". ABC.
- ^ Xstrata buys Tahmoor and Anvil Hill in Australia