Philippines political situationNo, Esther, I don't think folks here know the political situation there. A year or two ago I said that OGC shareholders actually needed to read the FTAA, because folks thought the company owned something at Didipio when the company did not. OGC still owns nothing in the Philippines.
OGC is paying some amount of money every month to maintain the Didipio site in a state of preparedness. I wish we could learn the exact amount. Continuously pumping water out of a mine excavation costs a lot of money.
In May, 2022, the Philippines elects a new President, and Duterte will be gone. The current leader in the polls is his daughter-- but she said she's not running! And Duterte doesn't want her to run.
His political opponents have said that they plan to put Duterte in prison after the election-- again, the election is only 11 months away. So even if Duterte signs the new FTAA tomorrow for OGC to re-open the mine, there's obviously a great possibility that it will be shut right back down right after the election. Oh, but the Philippines courts won't allow that, you say..... Ha !!
This should never have reached this point, of course. Two years ago, when the FTAA was not renewed, OGC should have said "Okay, that's the way it is, and we're pulling out." Think of the $Millions that move would have saved. I think at the time that there was a new venture in Nevada that was being considered by OGC. But that had to be abandoned-- I'm guessing because of a money shortage at the time? Maybe someone here knows more of the details about that.