AVZ Discussion 2022

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Strongman

Regular
How to DM Winenut when his profile is locked ??
@Pedro
Just DM Winenut mate. He is the only one with the capacity to invite users to the conversation, as I said yesterday.

bear with him - seems to be affected by a powercut at the moment
 
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UglyFace

Emerged
What toilet you have issues with YOUR TOILET
Buy a long drop...lol...imo
AVZ matter is more important than LONG DROPS and RATS...imo
Have a good day....Hope AVZ is in the DRC US DEAL...imo
Is this fuck stain retarded..? Take your small rice dick and fuck off clown!
 
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Strongman

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tolate

Emerged
We need AVZ management to update S H not wait until we read it in the MEDIA...imo
I will be happy with 50 cents, that will be a 10 BA.....GGER for me..!!

BRING IT ON
 

CDK222

Member
There was an article today in perthnow.com.au (reputable news source 🤣) on Eckhof’s house in Trig selling for $7mil under asking……karma discount!!
 
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Xerof

Flaming 1967
How to DM Winenut when his profile is locked ??
Don’t post on profiles, use the envelope at top RHS to start a conversation with him
 
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JNRB

Regular
We need AVZ management to update S H not wait until we read it in the MEDIA...imo
I will be happy with 50 cents, that will be a 10 BA.....GGER for me..!!

BRING IT ON
Aaaaand IGNORE.
 
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Strongman

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New German article in AVZ, Eckhof, Cong, Mupande etc
 
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wombat74

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Mute22

Regular
Full gated Times article:

Tech titans Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates team up in race for minerals​


KoBold Metals, backed by the billionaires, is to begin mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which the US estimates has vast reserves of untapped minerals​

Collage of Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates with Congolese miners and the Congolese flag.

KoBold Metals, backed by Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, faces the challenge of operating in a fraught sector
Jane Flanagan
, Africa Correspondent

Sunday July 27 2025, 9.37pm, The Times
Acompany backed by the billionaires Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos is to challenge China in the global race for the minerals that power modern technology.

KoBold Metals is to begin mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is estimated by the US to have up to $24 trillion of largely untapped resources.

The firm has secured rights to mine one of the world’s largest hard-rock lithium deposits, in a region that has been fought over for decades. The venture will be a test of President Trump’s pro-business foreign policy and his pledge to restore peace to an area overrun with militia and troops from Congo’s neighbours. A Rwanda-backed rebel group has seized a swathe of land there, including its biggest cities, displacing hundreds of thousands of people.


A peace deal signed in Washington last month between the DRC and Rwanda to end the fighting was hailed as historic by Trump. Questions remain about its details, however, including the nature of any US security guarantees and which side will benefit most from US business investment.

Despite its immense supplies of copper, cobalt, coltan, tin and uranium, the DRC is among the five poorest countries in the world. For years, US firms considered the challenges of operating in such an unstable and corrupt country too great, which has enabled Chinese firms to get ahead.
Advertisement

However, Trump’s new focus appears to have provided enough confidence for KoBold Metals to agree a “large-scale minerals exploration programme” over 1,600 sq km in the DRC’s most volatile region.

Benjamin Katabuka, its director-general in the country, told the Financial Times that the firm was “looking to go big in this country … investments could be in the billions”.

KoBold Metals pledged to develop local talent and to “create thousands of high-paying Congolese jobs for decades”.
A young man carries a heavy bag of coltan and manganese ore at a mine in Rubaya, Democratic Republic of Congo.

Coltan and manganese are mined in Rubaya, near Goma in the eastern DRC, in a region under the control of M23 rebels
TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL
Miners carrying sacks of coltan and manganese at a mine in Rubaya, Democratic Republic of Congo.

TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL
Another US consortium, including a company led by former US special forces staff, has emerged as the leading bidder for Chemaf Resources Ltd, a Congolese copper and cobalt producer, after Kinshasa blocked its sale to a Chinese state-owned firm. President Tshisekedi of the DRC has long sought to attract more western investment to counterbalance China’s dominance.

He approached the US in February with an offer of mining rights in exchange for security support and has since backed calls for Trump to win the Nobel peace prize.
Advertisement

KoBold Metals’ agreement to develop the Roche Dure lithium deposit at Manono is contingent on resolving a long-running dispute over rights to the site between the Congolese government, Australia-based AVZ Minerals and China’s state-backed Zijin Mining.

The US start-up will also face the challenge of operating in a sector fraught with reports of labour abuses and environmental harm, and being judged against its billionaire backers’ humanitarian and green commitments. The Bezos Earth Fund has pledged $110 million in grants to protect the Congo basin and the Gates Foundation helps fund agricultural development in the region.

Founded in 2018, KoBold Metals distinguishes itself from traditional mining companies by using artificial intelligence to “scrape” geological archives and algorithms to identify potential mineral deposits. In 2024, it found Zambia’s largest copper deposit in a century.
A young boy panning for coltan and manganese in a Rubaya mine.

Traditional mining practices will be supplemented by the use of AI and algorithms to identify potential deposits
TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL

The conflict in the eastern DRC stems from the aftermath of the 1994 genocide in neighbouring Rwanda when nearly two million Hutus, including those accused of the slaughter, fled into Congo fearing reprisals. Rwanda has repeatedly intervened, citing threats from Hutu militias, and an estimated six million people have died in fighting, famine and disease. Analysts say much of the violence is driven by competition over natural resources.

Reports by the UN and a number of western governments, including the US and EU, have presented evidence that Rwanda is backing and arming the M23 rebel movement in part to loot minerals from the DRC and export them as their own. Rwanda denies the allegation.
 
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Mute22

Regular
Full gated Times article:

Tech titans Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates team up in race for minerals​


KoBold Metals, backed by the billionaires, is to begin mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which the US estimates has vast reserves of untapped minerals​

Collage of Jeff Bezos and Bill Gates with Congolese miners and the Congolese flag.

KoBold Metals, backed by Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos, faces the challenge of operating in a fraught sector
Jane Flanagan
, Africa Correspondent

Sunday July 27 2025, 9.37pm, The Times
Acompany backed by the billionaires Bill Gates and Jeff Bezos is to challenge China in the global race for the minerals that power modern technology.

KoBold Metals is to begin mining in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is estimated by the US to have up to $24 trillion of largely untapped resources.

The firm has secured rights to mine one of the world’s largest hard-rock lithium deposits, in a region that has been fought over for decades. The venture will be a test of President Trump’s pro-business foreign policy and his pledge to restore peace to an area overrun with militia and troops from Congo’s neighbours. A Rwanda-backed rebel group has seized a swathe of land there, including its biggest cities, displacing hundreds of thousands of people.


A peace deal signed in Washington last month between the DRC and Rwanda to end the fighting was hailed as historic by Trump. Questions remain about its details, however, including the nature of any US security guarantees and which side will benefit most from US business investment.

Despite its immense supplies of copper, cobalt, coltan, tin and uranium, the DRC is among the five poorest countries in the world. For years, US firms considered the challenges of operating in such an unstable and corrupt country too great, which has enabled Chinese firms to get ahead.
Advertisement

However, Trump’s new focus appears to have provided enough confidence for KoBold Metals to agree a “large-scale minerals exploration programme” over 1,600 sq km in the DRC’s most volatile region.

Benjamin Katabuka, its director-general in the country, told the Financial Times that the firm was “looking to go big in this country … investments could be in the billions”.

KoBold Metals pledged to develop local talent and to “create thousands of high-paying Congolese jobs for decades”.
A young man carries a heavy bag of coltan and manganese ore at a mine in Rubaya, Democratic Republic of Congo.

Coltan and manganese are mined in Rubaya, near Goma in the eastern DRC, in a region under the control of M23 rebels
TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL
Miners carrying sacks of coltan and manganese at a mine in Rubaya, Democratic Republic of Congo.

TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL
Another US consortium, including a company led by former US special forces staff, has emerged as the leading bidder for Chemaf Resources Ltd, a Congolese copper and cobalt producer, after Kinshasa blocked its sale to a Chinese state-owned firm. President Tshisekedi of the DRC has long sought to attract more western investment to counterbalance China’s dominance.

He approached the US in February with an offer of mining rights in exchange for security support and has since backed calls for Trump to win the Nobel peace prize.
Advertisement

KoBold Metals’ agreement to develop the Roche Dure lithium deposit at Manono is contingent on resolving a long-running dispute over rights to the site between the Congolese government, Australia-based AVZ Minerals and China’s state-backed Zijin Mining.

The US start-up will also face the challenge of operating in a sector fraught with reports of labour abuses and environmental harm, and being judged against its billionaire backers’ humanitarian and green commitments. The Bezos Earth Fund has pledged $110 million in grants to protect the Congo basin and the Gates Foundation helps fund agricultural development in the region.

Founded in 2018, KoBold Metals distinguishes itself from traditional mining companies by using artificial intelligence to “scrape” geological archives and algorithms to identify potential mineral deposits. In 2024, it found Zambia’s largest copper deposit in a century.
A young boy panning for coltan and manganese in a Rubaya mine.

Traditional mining practices will be supplemented by the use of AI and algorithms to identify potential deposits
TIMES PHOTOGRAPHER JACK HILL

The conflict in the eastern DRC stems from the aftermath of the 1994 genocide in neighbouring Rwanda when nearly two million Hutus, including those accused of the slaughter, fled into Congo fearing reprisals. Rwanda has repeatedly intervened, citing threats from Hutu militias, and an estimated six million people have died in fighting, famine and disease. Analysts say much of the violence is driven by competition over natural resources.

Reports by the UN and a number of western governments, including the US and EU, have presented evidence that Rwanda is backing and arming the M23 rebel movement in part to loot minerals from the DRC and export them as their own. Rwanda denies the allegation.
Given articles like this clearly driven by Kobold’s PR team—alongside the MoU they signed with AVZ explicitly acknowledging that AVZ must be fairly compensated for its rights to the deposit, it’s difficult to argue that Kobold intends to proceed over our heads.

Even factoring in the most recent agreement (which notably excludes AVZ), it’s evident they expect their own rights to be respected and understand that without setting a precedent of upholding existing rights, they’re unlikely to move forward at Manono. Not to mention, doing otherwise risks dragging themselves into litigation with MoU and precedent of cases that overwhelmingly favors AVZ.

The more likely scenario? AVZ and Kobold agree to a fair-value settlement or we return to arbitration. Until then, Manono sits idle, while Kobold continues exploring for another "monster" deposit, a situation that neither the DRC nor Kobold truly wants.
 
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