Showing posts with label Corea Del Sure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Corea Del Sure. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Banco surcoreano participará en un proyecto de mina de cobre en Panamá

Seúl
EFE

El Banco de Exportación e Importación de Corea (Eximbank), entidad estatal surcoreana, alcanzó un acuerdo con la empresa canadiense Inmet y un consorcio surcoreano para desarrollar un proyecto de minería de cobre en Panamá, informó hoy la agencia surcoreana Yonhap.


La entidad firmó un acuerdo preliminar por el que proporcionará apoyo financiero al proyecto, en el que participan, además de Inmet, el consorcio formado por Korea Resources y LS-Nikko Copper, y Korea Export Insurance (KEIC).


El pacto establece que Eximbank y KEIC proporcionarán asistencia financiera para el desarrollo de la mina, al tiempo que se promoverá la cooperación entre instituciones financieras y empresas de desarrollo de recursos para efectuar el proyecto "Cobre Panamá", en Coclé del Norte, en la provincia panameña de Colón.


Inmet tiene el cien por cien del capital del proyecto, aunque el consorcio surcoreano tiene la opción de adquirir una cuota del 20 por ciento.


Según Yonhap, el proyecto "Cobre Panamá" cuenta con una reserva total de 2.100 toneladas de este metal.


El consorcio surcoreano planea producir 51.000 toneladas de cobre al año durante 30 años a partir de 2015 con el fin de utilizarlo en el país asiático.


El acuerdo preliminar coincide con la visita del presidente surcoreano, Lee Myung-bak, a Panamá para participar en la cumbre de gobernantes del Sistema de la Integración Centroamericana (SICA) y estrechar la cooperación económica, técnica y científica.



Nota extraída de: http://www.pa-digital.com.pa/periodico/edicion-actual/hoy-interna.php?story_id=935894#ixzz0sMKC0jlN
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Friday, June 27, 2008

North Korea destroys nuclear reactor tower


YONGBYON, North Korea - North Korea destroyed the most visible symbol of its nuclear weapons program Friday, blasting apart the cooling tower at its main atomic reactor in a sign of its commitment to stop making plutonium for atomic bombs.

An explosion at the base of the cylindrical structure sent the tower collapsing into a cloud of white and gray smoke that billowed into blue skies as international journalists and diplomats looked on, according to video footage filmed by international video news agency Associated Press Television News.

The demolition of the 60-foot-tall cooling tower at the North's main reactor complex is a response to U.S. concessions after the North delivered a declaration Thursday of its nuclear programs to be dismantled.

"This is a very important step in the disablement process and I think it puts us in a good position to move into the next phase," said Sung Kim, the U.S. State Department's top expert on the Koreas who attended the demolition.

After the tower's tumble to the ground, Kim shook hands with Ri Yong Ho, director of safeguards at North Korea's Academy of Atomic Energy Research, who was the most senior Pyongyang official present.

"The demolition of the cooling tower is proof that the six-party talks have proceeded a step further," Ri said, referring to the nuclear negotiations.

The tower destruction was not mentioned by the North's media or shown on state TV broadcasts.

In the North Korean government's first reaction to the developments this week, North Korea's Foreign Ministry welcomed Washington's decision to take the country off the U.S. trade and sanctions blacklists.

"The U.S. measure should lead to a complete and all-out withdrawal of its hostile policy toward (the North) so that the denuclearization process can proceed smoothly," the ministry said in a statement carried by the official Korean Central News Agency.

The symbolic tower explosion came just 20 months after Pyongyang shocked the world by detonating a nuclear bomb in an underground test to confirm its status as an atomic power. The nuclear blast spurred an about-face in the U.S. hard-line policy against Pyongyang, leading to the North's first steps to scale back its nuclear weapons development since the reactor became operational in 1986.

Last year, the North switched off the reactor at Yongbyon, some 60 miles north of the capital of Pyongyang, and it already has begun disabling the facility under the watch of U.S. experts so that it cannot easily be restarted.

The destruction of the cooling tower, which carries off waste heat to the atmosphere, is another step forward but not the most technically significant, because it is a simple piece of equipment that would be easy to rebuild.

Still, the demolition offers the most photogenic moment yet in the disarmament negotiations that have dragged on for more than five years and suffered repeated deadlocks and delays.

Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the tower's destruction would mark a step toward disablement, something that has been ongoing for many months to prevent the North from making more plutonium for bombs.

"It is important to get North Korea out of the plutonium business, but that will not be the end of the story," she said in Kyoto, Japan, on the sidelines of a meeting of the Group of Eight industrialized countries.

North Korea's nuclear declaration, which was delivered six months later than the country promised and has not yet been released publicly, is said to only give the overall figure for how much plutonium was produced at Yongbyon — but no details of bombs that may have been made.

Experts believe the North has produced up to 110 pounds of weapons-grade plutonium, enough for as many as 10 nuclear bombs.

The declaration was being distributed Friday by China, the chair of the arms talks, to the other countries involved, U.S. envoy Christopher Hill said.

"We'll have to study it very carefully and then we'll have to work on verification," Hill said in Kyoto.

The declaration does not address the North's alleged uranium enrichment program or suspicions of its nuclear proliferation to other countries, such as Syria.