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Nagambie Resources Ltd V.NAG


Primary Symbol: NGMBF

Nagambie Resources Limited is an Australia-based natural resources exploration company. The principal activities of the Company include exploration for, and development of, gold, associated minerals including antimony, and construction materials in Australia, and the investigation and development of waste handling assets. The Company is focused on targeting epitherm alantimony-gold mineralized systems across 3,200 square kilometers of tenements in the Waranga Domain of the Melbourne Structural Zone, in Victoria, Australia. The Company's flagship project is the Antimony-Gold Project, which sits in proximity to the gold-antimony mines at Fosterville (Agnico Eagle) and Costerfield (Mandalay Resources). The Antimony-Gold Project is located at the 100% owned Nagambie Mine. Its Whroo Goldfields project is located approximately 130 kilometers (km) north of Melbourne. It also holds interest in Whroo Project, PASS Project, and Sand Project.


OTCPK:NGMBF - Post by User

Post by sebastian2on Dec 30, 2009 2:40pm
322 Views
Post# 16626905

Third week in a row...

Third week in a row...

I like this part:

"Thirteen million tons of coal withdrawn from reserves in three weeks is starting to look like a story too good to be true from the producers' perspective, but the data is fairly clear," Genscape said.

"The gap between shipments and consumption has not been as wide during the last four weeks of the year since Genscape started collecting transport data in 2005," the data provider pointed out.

US coal stores fall 2.5 pct on cold, demand - Genscape

Tue Dec 29, 2009 10:30pm IST

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HOUSTON, Dec 29 (Reuters) - Coal stockpiles at U.S. power plants fell 2.5 percent this week from last week as wintry weather widened the gap between shipments and consumption, Genscape said Tuesday.

Still, total coal inventory was 6.8 percent greater than the same week of 2008, the power industry data provider said.

Power generators had 172.1 million tons of coal on hand as of Tuesday, down from 176.5 million tons last Tuesday but up from 161.2 million tons the same week last year, Genscape said.

As of Tuesday, U.S. generators - which rely on coal to fuel about half of U.S. electricity production - had an average of 66 days' supply of coal on hand, assuming typical burn rates, down from 67 days the previous week, Genscape said.

Power companies as of Tuesday averaged 4 more days' of coal stockpiled than the same week last year, unchanged from last week's cushion over 2008 stockpiles, data showed.

"Thirteen million tons of coal withdrawn from reserves in three weeks is starting to look like a story too good to be true from the producers' perspective, but the data is fairly clear," Genscape said.

"The gap between shipments and consumption has not been as wide during the last four weeks of the year since Genscape started collecting transport data in 2005," the data provider pointed out.

Stockpiles could rebound next week as cold weather eases after boosting demand amid impeding deliveries in some regions, and total inventories remain much fatter than last year, Genscape said.

Inventories typically grow in spring and fall when demand for heating and cooling drops. Stockpiles usually shrink during summer and winter when demand rises for climate control in homes, stores and factories.

This year has been different. Due to the economic slowdown, coal inventory at the end of summer 2009 was unusually high, partly because drawdowns were weak and miners had geared up to ship more based on 2008 performance.

Mathematical rounding sometimes affects the results, overstating some changes and understating others, Genscape has said. (Reporting by Bruce Nichols; Editing by John Picinich)

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