Smelted copper expected to be exempt from Mongolia's Windfall Profits Tax law
26 Maio 2006 - 12:08PM
PR Newswire (US)
Statement issued today by John Macken, President and CEO of Ivanhoe
Mines Ltd. ULAANBAATAR, MONGOLIA, May 26 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --
The senior management of Ivanhoe Mines have noted public statements
by proponents of Mongolia's Windfall Profits Tax to the effect that
the new tax is not intended to apply to high- grade copper produced
through a smelting process. Some members of Parliament who
introduced the tax bill have indicated that one intent behind the
tax measure was that it would serve as an incentive to add value to
copper concentrate through the establishment of smelters in
Mongolia. Smelters would facilitate the development of new
businesses that would use the copper in a variety of products.
Further clarification from lawmakers and authorities regarding the
law's potential incentive application to smelting, and also to
cathode production, is expected in coming weeks. The Windfall
Profits law imposes a tax rate of 68% when copper prices reach
US$2,600 a tonne ($1.18 per pound), and when gold reaches US$500 an
ounce. The law states that the tax will be imposed only on what is
termed excessive profits from "gold" and "copper ore and
concentrate" produced in Mongolia. In a meeting with senior
government representatives in March, Ivanhoe undertook to work with
the government to have downstream smelting capacity built in
Mongolia, which could serve Oyu Tolgoi and other existing and
proposed copper mines in the country. Ivanhoe's Integrated
Development Plan for Oyu Tolgoi, released in September, 2005,
contained valuations based on assumed metal prices of US$1 per
pound for copper and US$400 per ounce for gold. A senior aide to
Mongolia's President N. Enkhbayar said on television tonight (May
26, Mongolia time) that the President had chosen not to exercise
his constitutional authority to veto the Windfall Profits Tax on
copper and gold. However, the aide said that the President believed
that the tax had been adopted in haste two weeks ago and that
members of Parliament should carefully consider the provisions and
implications of the new tax within the context of the current,
ongoing debate over proposed changes to Mongolia's Minerals Law and
Tax Law. Information contacts -------------------- Investors: Bill
Trenaman: +1.604.688.5755 Media: Bob Williamson: +1.604.331.9880
Mongolia: Layton Croft + 976 9911-3339 DATASOURCE: Ivanhoe Mines
Ltd. CONTACT: Investors: Bill Trenaman: (604) 688-5755, Media: Bob
Williamson: (604) 331-9880, Mongolia: Layton Croft: + 976
9911-3339; To request a free copy of this organization's annual
report, please go to http://www.newswire.ca/ and click on Tools for
Investors.
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