Energy Daily: Mining: Hazards of the frontier, Kashagan: there wil...

 
 
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Thursday September 12 2013
 
 
Energy
 
Mining: Hazards of the frontier
 
Companies flocked to invest in Mozambique's much-hyped coal reserves but their logistical problems illustrate the dangers of rushing to difficult new territories
 
 
 
Kashagan: there will be oil
 
 
Kashagan oilfield begins production
 
 
African Minerals curbs expansion plans
 
 
African Barrick Gold's COO steps down
 
 
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Oil & Gas
 
Continental Resources eyes 32% output growth
 
Continental has been one of the biggest successes of the US shale oil boom, and is the leading producer in the Bakken formation in North Dakota
 
 
 
Gulf Keystone court victory opens door to potential suitors
 
Mining
 
'Glencore way' to cut costs laid out
 
Ivan Glasenberg, chief executive, repudiates many Xstrata practices and says he is surprised at how much 'fat' there is to cut at the miner
 
 
 
Glencore lifts savings target to $2bn
 
Nick Butler
 
Germany – power and uncertainty ahead
 

The German election later this month might seem to be about to produce more of the same. On the eurozone currency crisis – as Quentin Peel wrote in the Financial Times a couple of weeks ago – the expectation of a big reform plan once Angela Merkel wins re-election has given way to the realisation that nothing much will change unless the markets force a radical response. Austerity and crisis management are the watchwords, and only a major event such as a collapse in the credibility of Italian debt repayment will force Germany to address the need for a full-scale resolution of the problem. That could involve the creation of a tighter EU core, or a reluctant acceptance that the euro as designed cannot work without a backstop funding mechanism in the form of Eurobonds. Nothing in the election campaign has provided a clue as to which of these alternatives will prevail.

Similarly on energy policy the election is beginning to look like a breakpoint which could have wide implications across Europe. But the direction of change remains uncertain and dangerously dependent on the precise make up of the next coalition government.

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