Rosemont facing “extreme scrutiny” for $404 million in construction loans as cash runs low

Already facing a cash flow crisis that could see Augusta Resource Corporation run out of money by year’s end, a former World Bank official says it is very unlikely the company will be successful in its plan to obtain $404 million in loans from international development banks to finance construction of its proposed Rosemont copper mine.

Renate Kloppinger, who was responsible for developing rural financial systems for the World Bank and previously worked as a senior corporate banker for CitiBank and Deutsche Bank, says Augusta will face “extreme scrutiny” from international development banks for its proposed Rosemont open-pit copper mine in the Coronado National Forest.

“Given the extreme scrutiny that mining projects have to undergo as far as environmental and human impacts are concerned, I could not see a European public bank wanting to face huge adverse publicity, even if its board, management and staff should be in favor of a mining project such as Rosemont, which I could not envision,” Kloppinger says. “The current tight money situation makes this even more unlikely.”

Difficulty in securing the $404 million in long-term debt compounds the financial problems facing the Vancouver, B.C.- based speculative mining development company.

The Arizona Daily Star reported on June 24 that Augusta had less than $20 million cash on hand and was spending at a rate where it would run out of money by the end of 2012.

Augusta has repeatedly stated it was on the verge of securing the loans, but so far, that has not happened.

In February 2010, Augusta’s CEO Gil Clausen was quoted in a mining trade journal  saying that Augusta has “very strong” interest from development banks and that the company expected to secure financing by the end of the October 2010.

Last January, Clausen told the Daily Star that Augusta was negotiating final terms for $404 million in financing with import-export banks in Denmark, Switzerland, Germany and Korea. Clausen said Augusta expected the loans to be approved by April.

Kloppinger, who holds an M.S degree in Psychology from Goethe-University in Frankfurt and an MBA in international finance from UCLA, said her analysis of the Rosemont mine’s potential impact on Southern Arizona’s economy showed it to be “quite dismal”.

“And this does not even take into consideration the destruction of a wonderful habit and the terrible environmental impacts on water, air and night skies,” she said.

Kloppinger worked on financing development projects in communities on three continents directly impacted my mining projects. The purpose of the projects, she said, was to mitigate the negative impacts of the mines on the local economy and people.

“None of those projects worked very well and the mines never benefited much the local population, except for some well-placed officials, and the promoters and mine owners, of course,” she said.

 

 

 

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Forest Service casts doubt on Augusta’s pledge to begin mine construction this year

In another set back to Augusta Resource Corporation’s plans to begin construction of the Rosemont mine later this year, the U.S. Forest Service announced it has no timetable for when environmental studies needed to build the mine will be completed.

“A date has not been set for publication of a final (Environmental Impact Statement),” the Forest Service states in a June 21 press release.

Publication of a Final EIS is needed before the Forest Service can issue a “Record of Decision” that could result in issuing a permit for the mine. Augusta proposes to build an open-pit copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains on the Coronado National Forest south of Tucson.

Vancouver, B.C.-based Augusta has been telling investors in regulatory filings that it “expects the Record of Decision to be issued late in the second or third quarter 2012 with construction to start in the second half of 2012.”

The Forest Service, however, said that the draft EIS is far from complete and that “additional mitigation measures are being developed” and that a “number of earlier plans are being revised and updated.”

The Forest Service is requiring wholesale revisions to Augusta’s draft EIS including  “additional analyses of air quality, water quality and quantity, seeps and springs, riparian resources, dark skies, socioeconomics, and transportation.”

The Forest Service also could require Augusta to prepare a “supplemental” Draft EIS that was requested by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency last February. The EPA sharply criticized Augusta’s Draft EIS as being among the worst the agency has ever reviewed.

The Arizona Daily Star reports that the Forest Service has not made a decision on when it will determine whether a supplemental Draft EIS will be required. Completing a supplemental Draft EIS would take at least several months, and possibly much longer, depending on the complexity of the review.

Despite the uncertain timetable, the Forest Service states that work is proceeding as quickly as possible on the studies.

“The Forest Service is working closely with cooperating agencies and the proponent to obtain the required information as quickly and expeditiously as possible,” the agency states. “As soon as the additional reports and analyses are received and reviewed, a timeline for the Final EIS and Record of Decision will be reported.”

The uncertainty over when the environmental reports will be completed and the Record of Decision issued comes at the same time Augusta is facing a cash flow squeeze. The company states in regulatory filings it will run out of cash later this year unless it sharply reduces spending or obtains additional funds.

 

 

 

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Rosemont Copper faces cash flow squeeze: Arizona Daily Star

Rosemont Copper Company’s parent company, Augusta Resource Corp., will run out of cash by the end of the year unless it sharply reduces spending or receives a new injection of capital, the Arizona Daily Star reported Sunday in a lengthy story by Tony Davis.

Augusta’s available cash to carry out its permitting and other efforts has dwindled sharply over the past year, just as the mine project has hit some major snags, most notably two highly critical letters from the Environmental Protection Agency last winter, the Star reported.

The Star also provided key details  from the company’s financial statements:

• August’s $19.6 million cash on hand as of March 31 is down from about $31 million at the start of 2012 and about $50.4 million at the end of the first quarter of 2011.

• In the first quarter of 2012, the company spent about $10 million on expenses related to mine development, on top of about $39 million in similar expenses for 2011. The first quarter expenses included $8.5 million for “permitting, engineering and ongoing support activities.”

• The company reported a $29 million working capital deficiency – representing liabilities exceeding assets – for the first quarter of 2012. That compared to a $17.6 million working capital deficiency at the start of 2012 and $17.79 million in available capital at the start of 2011. The latest deficiency means that financing committed for the project’s current phase – before full permitting – is short by the $29 million.

The increased working capital deficit is due to spending on administration, permitting and operating costs and on deposits on mining equipment, Augusta financial statements say.

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Breaking News: CEO of Augusta Resource, the parent company of Rosemont Copper, is under fire for “exceedingly poor decision-making”, “gross failures of judgment” and “serious conflicts of interest”

More damaging information is emerging about Augusta Resource Corporation’s executive leadership, this time for Augusta President and CEO Gil Clausen.

Angry shareholders of Jaguar Mining Company, Inc. are seeking Clausen’s resignation from Jaguar’s Board of Directors at the June 29 annual meeting. Jaguar is a Canadian incorporated gold mining company with operations in Brazil and corporate headquarters in Concord, NH.

Bristol Investment Partners, LLC, the largest shareholder of Jaguar, released a sharply worded letter today (click here) criticizing Clausen and two other Jaguar directors for “exceedingly poor decision-making and gross failures of judgment” and “serious conflicts of interest that impugn” their abilities to serve as directors.

Bristol cites the three directors’ handling of an all-cash offer last November by Shandong Gold Group to buy Jaguar for $9.30 a share. The offer represented a 73 percent premium over Jaguar’s share price of $5.39.

Jaguar did not accept the Shandong offer, which Bristol says was an “ill-advised and reckless gamble” that “backfired completely, inflicting enormous damage on Jaguar’s shareholders.”

Bristol claims that Clausen and directors Gary German and John Andrews stood to reap millions of dollars in stock benefits if Jaguar was sold for $10 a share or more. Clausen, German and Andrews are the “Lead Directors” of Jaguar.

“Clearly, the interest of the Lead Directors were substantially misaligned with the interests of shareholders as the Lead Directors assessed the US$9.30 change of control proposal from Shandong,” the letter states.

The Jaguar shareholder revolt could raise problems for Augusta, where Clausen is the highest profile executive of the company whose subsidiary, Rosemont Copper, is seeking to a build a massive open pit copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains south of Tucson.

Augusta has been unsuccessful in a more than two-year effort to secure $400 million in long term debt financing for the Rosemont project.

[Click here for the Bristol Investment Partners’ press release]

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Proposed Rosemont Mine would destroy southern Arizona’s trails

This Saturday, as Americans celebrate National Trails Day, in southern Arizona there is a cloud hanging over the hiking community and other recreational users of public lands in southern Arizona. Outdoor recreation including trails are under direct threat from the proposed massive open pit copper mine in the Santa Rita Mountains near Tucson, Arizona. Continue reading

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