860 resultados para mining boom
Resumo:
En los últimos diez años, nuestro país, y más precisamente la Cordillera de los Andes, ha sido el escenario de un marcado aumento de la actividad minera, tanto en lo que se refiere a tareas de exploración como de explotación. Los grandes proyectos orientados a la explotación de minerales metalíferos son los que impulsan este boom minero. Las razones más importantes que explican este acontecimiento son: el alto potencial minero de nuestro país, la profundización de las políticas neoliberales en la década de los 90, aumento del precio del oro en el mercado internacional, y el desplazamiento de actividades contaminantes desde los países centrales, hacia la periferia. Dentro de este contexto la provincia de San Juan ha tenido un rol preponderante como "capital nacional de la minería", promoviéndola como la "actividad productiva fundamental" para el crecimiento socio-económico provincial. Es en los partidos del noroeste de esta provincia donde la empresa canadiense Barrick Gold, la mayor empresa minera aurífera del mundo, emplazó en 2005 el emprendimiento Veladero, despertando, principalmente, el descontento entre los pobladores de los departamentos de Iglesia y Jáchal, y de distintas ONG abocadas a la problemática ambiental.
Resumo:
En los últimos diez años, nuestro país, y más precisamente la Cordillera de los Andes, ha sido el escenario de un marcado aumento de la actividad minera, tanto en lo que se refiere a tareas de exploración como de explotación. Los grandes proyectos orientados a la explotación de minerales metalíferos son los que impulsan este boom minero. Las razones más importantes que explican este acontecimiento son: el alto potencial minero de nuestro país, la profundización de las políticas neoliberales en la década de los 90, aumento del precio del oro en el mercado internacional, y el desplazamiento de actividades contaminantes desde los países centrales, hacia la periferia. Dentro de este contexto la provincia de San Juan ha tenido un rol preponderante como "capital nacional de la minería", promoviéndola como la "actividad productiva fundamental" para el crecimiento socio-económico provincial. Es en los partidos del noroeste de esta provincia donde la empresa canadiense Barrick Gold, la mayor empresa minera aurífera del mundo, emplazó en 2005 el emprendimiento Veladero, despertando, principalmente, el descontento entre los pobladores de los departamentos de Iglesia y Jáchal, y de distintas ONG abocadas a la problemática ambiental.
Resumo:
En los últimos diez años, nuestro país, y más precisamente la Cordillera de los Andes, ha sido el escenario de un marcado aumento de la actividad minera, tanto en lo que se refiere a tareas de exploración como de explotación. Los grandes proyectos orientados a la explotación de minerales metalíferos son los que impulsan este boom minero. Las razones más importantes que explican este acontecimiento son: el alto potencial minero de nuestro país, la profundización de las políticas neoliberales en la década de los 90, aumento del precio del oro en el mercado internacional, y el desplazamiento de actividades contaminantes desde los países centrales, hacia la periferia. Dentro de este contexto la provincia de San Juan ha tenido un rol preponderante como "capital nacional de la minería", promoviéndola como la "actividad productiva fundamental" para el crecimiento socio-económico provincial. Es en los partidos del noroeste de esta provincia donde la empresa canadiense Barrick Gold, la mayor empresa minera aurífera del mundo, emplazó en 2005 el emprendimiento Veladero, despertando, principalmente, el descontento entre los pobladores de los departamentos de Iglesia y Jáchal, y de distintas ONG abocadas a la problemática ambiental.
Resumo:
La presente investigación tiene como objetivo principal, analizar las dinámicas de desarrollo local del distrito minero Litoral Pacífico durante el periodo 2008-2012 a partir del modelo extractivista, con el fin de demostrar que, a pesar del auge minero durante estos gobiernos, el crecimiento de la actividad y la entrada de capital a estos municipios, el desarrollo local es escaso ante las dinámicas del conflicto armado interno y el abandono estatal que ha existido por excelencia en esta zona. Por lo tanto, a partir de la utilización del método cualitativo, se utilizarán estudios e informes de las fuentes primarias y secundarias, que permitan un análisis explicativo de este fenómeno económico y social.
Resumo:
Australia is currently in the midst of a major resources boom. Resultant growing demands for labour in regional and remote areas have accelerated the recruitment of non resident workers, mostly contractors, who work extended block rosters of 12-hour shifts and are accommodated in work camps, often adjacent to established mining towns. Serious social impacts of these practices, including violence and crime, have generally escaped industry, government and academic scrutiny. This paper highlights some of these impacts on affected regional communities and workers and argues that post-industrial mining regimes serve to mask and privatize these harms and risks, shifting them on to workers, families and communities.
Resumo:
While the role of executives’ cognition in organisations’ responses to change is a central topic in strategic cognition research, changes in firms’ environment are typically not measured directly but described either as an event (for example, new industry legislation) or represented by a time period (e.g. when a new technology impacted an industry). The Australian mining sector has witnessed a historically significant change in demand for its products and we begin by developing measures of changes in supply and demand for key commodities during the period 1992-2008. We identify sub-groups of firms based on their activities and commodity sector and examine the relation of these variables to executives’ cognition and to firms’ CapEx. We find industry, firm and cognitive variables are related to both strategic cognition and firms’ CapEx.
Resumo:
The paper develops a Dynamic Stochastic General Equilibrium (DSGE) model, which assesses the macroeconomic and labor market effects derived from simulating a positive shock to the stochastic component of the mining-energy sector productivity. Calibrating the model for the Colombian economy, this shock generates a whole increase in formal wages and a raise in tax revenues, expanding total consumption of the household members. These facts increase non-tradable goods prices relative to tradable goods prices, then real exchange rate decreases (appreciation) and occurs a displacement of productive resources from the tradable (manufacturing) sector to the non-tradable sector, followed by an increase in formal GDP and formal job gains. This situation makes the formal sector to absorb workers from the informal sector through the non-tradable formal subsector, which causes informal GDP to go down. As a consequence, in the net consumption falls for informal workers, which leads some members of the household not to offer their labor force in the informal sector but instead they prefer to keep unemployed. Therefore, the final result on the labor market is a decrease in the number of informal workers, of which a part are in the formal sector and the rest are unemployed.
Resumo:
This article examines the figure of the ‘Cashed-up Bogan’ or ‘Cub’ in Australian media from 2006 to 2009. It explains that ‘Bogan’, like that of ‘Chav’ in Britain, is a widely engaged negative descriptor for the white working-class poor. In contrast, ‘Cubs’ have economic capital. This capital, and the Cub’s emergence, is linked to Australia’s resource boom of recent decades when the need for skilled labour allowed for a highly demarcated segment of the working class to earn relatively high incomes in the mining sector and to participate in consumption. We argue that access to economic capital has provided the Cub with mobility to enter the everyday spaces of the middle class, but this has caused disruption and anxiety to middle-class hegemony. As a result, the middle class has redrawn and reinforced class-infused symbolic and cultural boundaries, whereby, despite their wealth, pernicious media representations mark Cubs as ‘other’ to the middle-class deservingness, taste and morality.
Resumo:
Global demand for minerals and energy products has fuelled Australia’s recent ‘resources boom’ and led to the rapid expansion of mining projects not solely in remote regions but increasingly in long-settled traditionally agriculture-dependent rural areas. Not only has this activity radically changed the economic geography of the nation but a fundamental shift has also occurred to accommodate the acceleration in industry labour demands. In particular, the rush to mine has seen the entrenchment of workforce arrangements largely dependent on fly-in, fly-out (FIFO) and drive–in, drive–out (DIDO) workers. This form of employment has been highly contentious in rural communities at the frontline of resource sector activities. In the context of structural sweeping changes, the selection of study locations informed by a range of indices of violence. Serendipitously we carried out fieldwork in communities undergoing rapid change as a result of expanding resource sector activities. The presence of large numbers of non-resident FIFO and DIDO workers was transforming these frontline communities. This chapter highlights some implications of these changes, drawing upon one particular location, which historically depended on agriculture but has undergone redefinition through mining.
Resumo:
Despite ongoing ‘boom’ conditions in the Australian mining industry, women remain substantially and unevenly under-represented in the sector, as is the case in other resource-dependent countries. Building on the literature critiquing business-case rationales and strategies as a means to achieve women’s equality in the workplace, we examine the business case for employing more women as advanced by the Australian mining industry. Specifically, we apply a discourse analysis to seven substantial, publically-available documents produced by the industry’s national and state peak organizations between 2005 and 2013. Our study makes two contributions. First, we map the features of the business case at the sectoral rather than firm or workplace level and examine its public mobilization. Second, we identify the construction and deployment of a normative identity – ‘the ideal mining woman’ – as a key outcome of this business-case discourse. Crucially, women are therein positioned as individually responsible for gender equality in the workplace.
Resumo:
Until the 1970s mining leases were issued by state governments subject to conditions that companies build or substantially finance local community infrastructure, including housing, streets, transport, schools, hospitals and recreation facilities. Townships and communities went hand in hand with mining development. However, in the past thirty years mining companies have moved progressively to an expeditionary strategy for natural resources extraction - operating a continuous production cycle of 12 hour shifts - increasingly reliant on non-resident, fly-in, fly-out or drive-in, drive-out (FIFO/DIDO) workers who typically work block rosters, reside in work camps adjacent to existing communities and travel large distances from their homes. This paper presents the key findings of our survey into the social impacts of this kind of mining development in Qld. Based on the results we argue that the social license to develop new mining projects is strong for projects requiring a 25% or less non-resident workforce, diminishes significantly thereafter and is very weak for projects planning to recruit a non-resident workforce in excess of 75%. This finding is significant because there are at least 67 new mining projects undergoing social impact assessment in Queensland, and many it appears are planning to hire significant proportions of non-resident workers. The paper considers the policy implications of this growing social justice issue concluding there is a clear need for national leadership in formulating a national policy framework for guiding socially responsible and sustainable mining development into the next millennium.
Resumo:
Includes bibliography
Resumo:
Includes bibliographical references (p. 456-482) and index.