Governmental Alchemy in a Knowledge Economy: Transforming Information into Bars of Gold

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
E Ahern
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
6
File Size:
163 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 2002

Abstract

In exchange for issuing minerals rights from the Crown Mineral Estate to explorers and miners, the Crown expects a æfair returnÆ on this investment, ultimately for the benefit of all New Zealanders. In the case of mining permits, this return is in the form of a tangible asset û royalties from mining activities. But for exploration activity, the return sought by the Crown is an intangible asset û information. The information obtained serves three purposes û in helping Crown Minerals to set work programme conditions during permit allocation, for monitoring the performance of permit holders in accordance with permit conditions, and for archiving and making available for future interested explorers and other parties. Difficulties can arise during the allocation and monitoring process when either party has more information than the other that is not shared. To date not enough emphasis has been placed on the intrinsic value and content of the information generated by explorers and the importance this information can have in the exploration process leading to new mineral discoveries. For attracting exploration investment, the quality and availability of such information, combined with other geoscientific data, is a fundamental determinant for potential explorers when choosing to explore in a global market, and strongly defines the mineral prospectivity for a country. This is something the Australian States and other jurisdictions seeking mineral investment learnt long ago, and who now provide substantial amounts of cheaply or freely available packaged geoscientific datasets, increasingly over the Internet. To have a vibrant mineral exploration industry so that the benefits from the mineral estate can be realised for all New Zealanders, a shift in emphasis to the value of its mineral information base itself is required. Such an approach is befitting of a true Knowledge Economy, and would enable the Crown to make better-informed decisions regarding utilisation of its natural resources.
Citation

APA: E Ahern  (2002)  Governmental Alchemy in a Knowledge Economy: Transforming Information into Bars of Gold

MLA: E Ahern Governmental Alchemy in a Knowledge Economy: Transforming Information into Bars of Gold. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 2002.

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