Peabody, China’s Shenhua, Russian-Mongolian consortium to develop Tavan Tolgoi

06 Jul 2011

US mining giant Peabody Energy, China's Shenhua Energy Co and a Russian-Mongolian consortium have been chosen by the Mongolian government to jointly develop part one of the world's largest coking coal deposits at Tavan Tolgoi, 270 kilometers from the Chinese border.

Under the long awaited deal, Shenhua will hold a 40-per cent stake, the Russian-Mongolian consortium will own 36 per cent, while Peabody, the biggest US coal miner, will hold the remaining 24 per cent.

Bidders for Tavan Tolgoi included mining giants Anglo Australian miner BHP Billiton, Vale of Brazil, South Korea's COPEC consortium, Japan's Mitsui & Co, Swiss diversified miner Xstrata, India's Jindal Steel and Power Ltd and ArcelorMittal, the world's largest steel maker.

Ironically, BHP Billiton, which had won the right to develop the Tavan Tolgoi coal deposits in the 1990s, had returned the stake to the Mongolian government as it found the deposit too expensive to develop at that time.

Early last year, the Mongolian government scrapped the auction of the Tavan Tolgoi coal deposits, opting instead to retain ownership of the deposit and develop it through either a mining contract or a production sharing arrangement.

The winning companies will pay the Mongolian government 500 million as a ''direct payment'' and another $500 million as an ''advance payment'' as well as taxes and fees.