Australia
Rooster Talk: Raising Hemerdon Tungsten Mine from the ashes – Tungsten West
Mark Thompson of Tungsten West Limited shares the history of the Hemerdon Mine project from the promise to the disaster and now to its resurrection.
About Tungsten West[hhmc]
Tungsten West Limited (TWL) owns the Hemerdon Mine – the world's fourth-largest tungsten resource, which is found just outside Plymouth in the County of Devon in the UK.
Formerly owned by Wolf Minerals Ltd, TWL is rebuilding the processing plant and including cutting-edge technologies in order to make Hemerdon one of the largest and lowest-cost tungsten producers in the world.
I am very interested in the tungsten industry. Having been involved in this sector, I was curious at how Tungsten West was going to raise the Hemerdon Tungsten Mine from the ashes.
This Rooster Talk was everything that I had hoped as Mark clearly detailed the entire process.
The viability of the project is ingenious and I take my hat off to management.
This is not your typical resource mining story. The way this project tackles th..

Mark Thompson of Tungsten West Limited shares the history of the Hemerdon Mine project from the promise to the disaster and now to its resurrection.
About Tungsten West
Tungsten West Limited (TWL) owns the Hemerdon Mine – the world's fourth-largest tungsten resource, which is found just outside Plymouth in the County of Devon in the UK.
Formerly owned by Wolf Minerals Ltd, TWL is rebuilding the processing plant and including cutting-edge technologies in order to make Hemerdon one of the largest and lowest-cost tungsten producers in the world.
I am very interested in the tungsten industry. Having been involved in this sector, I was curious at how Tungsten West was going to raise the Hemerdon Tungsten Mine from the ashes.
This Rooster Talk was everything that I had hoped as Mark clearly detailed the entire process.
The viability of the project is ingenious and I take my hat off to management.
This is not your typical resource mining story. The way this project tackles the intriguing dark pricing of tungsten may actually position Tungsten West with a Tier-1 project in the coming years.
To add more icing to the cake, they got it for a bargain.
About Mark Thompson
A highly experienced trader, investor and entrepreneur in the natural resources sector, including founding several companies and working for major physical trading, hedge fund and private equity groups.
His experience includes:
- Former portfolio manager and chief investment officer at a large metal-focused hedge fund.
- Former partner at one of the worlds largest private equity houses
- Founder of several mineral exploration companies
- Non-executive director of listed and unlisted mining companies, specialising in corporate governance
- Expert in the supply and demand analysis of base metals
- Expert in trading metals derivatives.
For further information about Coffee with Samso and Rooster Talks visit: www.samso.com.au
Samso is primarily a consulting company that delivers digital information to the market in terms of creating organic content. Samso simplifies your story to customers or investors. Samso creates organic content for you to engage your audience and BRAND yourself to them. Samso provides bespoke research and presentation for clients to engage their customers or investors. Organic content allows audiences to feel a real sense of sincerity when you share your business strategy, allowing your business to stand out among the sea of sociRead More – Source
Australia
Australia election: Why is Australia’s parliament so white?

Australia
Scott Morrison effectively ditches his promise to establish a federal anti-corruption commission

Scott Morrison has effectively abandoned his promise to establish a federal anti-corruption watchdog, confirming he would only proceed with legislation in the new parliament if Labor agreed to pass the Coalition’s heavily criticised proposal without amendments.
Morrison pledged before the 2019 election to legislate a federal integrity body in the parliamentary term that has just ended. The prime minister broke that promise, failing to introduce his own proposal before the 46th parliament was prorogued.
On the hustings on Wednesday, Morrison was asked – given his previous undertaking to create the body – whether he would promise to put his proposal to a vote in the next parliament in the event the Coalition won the 21 May election.
Morrison declined to make that promise. “Our position on this hasn’t changed,” the prime minister said. “Our view has been the same – when the Labor party is prepared to support that legislation in that form, then we will proceed with it.”
The prime minister has attempted to inoculate himself from criticism about breaking an election promise by saying he tabled the integrity commission proposal in the parliament.
Tabling an exposure draft, which is what the prime minister did, is not the same as introducing finished legislation to the House of Representatives or the Senate that is then debated and voted on.
As well as repeatedly fudging what happened in parliament, Morrison has also created the impression the proposal can only proceed if Labor agrees to its passage without amendments.
All governments routinely introduce legislation for debate without any undertaking that it will be passed by the opposition. Labor favours a stronger model than the Coalition’s proposal.
Morrison’s lack of urgency on the issue created tensions within government ranks. Late last year, the Tasmanian Liberal MP Bridget Archer crossed the floor to support independent MP Helen Haines’ bill to establish a federal integrity commission. Archer accused the government of “inertia” over the issue.
At that time, Archer said she was “perplexed” at her own government’s failure to release a revised bill almost three years after it was promised before the last election.
While Morrison clearly wants to move on from the issue, he will face renewed pressure from crossbench independents if the coming election is close enough to deliver a hung parliament.
A number of independents running against Liberals in metropolitan seats have made it clear that establishing a credible national integrity commission will be a key demand in the event any new government – Liberal or Labor – is seeking agreements for confidence and supply.
Haines blasted Morrison’s comments on Wednesday. “Mr Morrison broke an election promise to introduce an anti-corruption commission and his pathway to creating one is still as vague as it was in the last parliament,” she said.
The crossbench independent said it was “nonsense” for the prime minister to claim that he could not proceed unless Labor agreed with the Coalition’s proposal without seeking any amendments. “It would appear we are in the same void as we were before,” Haines said.
Australia
Chinese healer Hong Chi Xiao has manslaughter charge overturned and will face new trial

A western Sydney “slapping therapy” practitioner who was found guilty of the manslaughter of a six-year-old diabetic boy and sentenced to 10 years in prison has had his conviction overturned and will face another trial.
Hong Chi Xiao appeared in Sydney’s Court of Criminal Appeal on Wednesday.
Mr Xiao was extradited from London to Sydney in 2017 to face charges more than two years after the boy, who cannot be named for legal reasons, died following a series of workshops held in Hurstville in April 2015.
The boy’s parents attended the conference where the self-proclaimed Chinese healer showed a “disdain for Western medicine”.
Mr Xiao allegedly advised the parents to stop their son’s insulin injections and blood glucose tests.
A Health Care Complaints Commission (HCCC) investigation found that Mr Xiao told the boy’s parents that slapping therapy “could heal all diseases, including diabetes, and that no medication was required because insulin could be generated” through the treatment.
He also allegedly recommended the six-year-old boy stop eating for three days and only drink water or a “ginger date drink”.
Slapping therapy, also known as paida lajin, advocates the slapping of skin to release toxins from patients.
The boy became visibly ill over several days and began vomiting a black substance, but Mr Xiao allegedly told the boy’s mother that his body was adjusting to the “self-healing process”.
He began having seizures and was rushed to St George Hospital, where he died.
The NSW Coroner found the treatment directly caused the boy’s death on April 27, 2015.
A District Court jury found Mr Xiao guilty of manslaughter for breaching the duty of care he owed the six-year-old boy through gross negligence.
He was handed a sentence of 10 years with a non-parole period of 7½ years in December 2019.
District Court Judge Garry Neilson said Mr Xiao showed “no signs of true remorse”.
Mr Xiao launched an appeal against his conviction, claiming inconsistencies in the evidence and that Judge Neilson told the jury that there was “no defence” during the trial.
Tim Game SC told the court that Judge Neilson did not summarise the defence case and did not give enough evidence to the jury to make a sound decision.
After a short adjournment, Justice Derek Price, Justice Ian Harrison and Justice Mark Ierace granted the appeal and quashed Mr Xiao’s conviction.
However, he will have to face a fresh trial in front of a new jury.
Mr Xiao will face the Sydney District Court on March 11 for mention.
He has been permanently banned from practising medicine by the HCCC.
The boy’s mother, father and grandmother were also initially charged over his death, but they were found not guilty and acquitted.
Mr Xiao has been in prison since his arrest in 2017 but has long rejected criticism that his techniques endanger lives.
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