Australia’s Isaac Plains coking-coal mine.
Why is Isaac Plains relevant? Well, in 2011 at the height of the Australian mining boom, Japanese conglomerate Sumitomo thought it has spotted a bargain, and a SMH reports, it approached Tony Poli, the founder of mid-tier miner Aquila Resources with an offer: it would buy its 50% stake in Isaac Plains, at the time Aquila’s only producing mine, for $430 million.
Market participants thought Aquila’s stake might fetch $300 million at best but Sumitomo was confident it would make a strong return, and offered almost 50% above fair value, especially since Brazil’s legendary mining company Vale owned the other 50% stake.
Net, the total value of the Isaac Plains mine in 2011 just just about $630 million.
It turns out Sumitomo was very, very wrong, and within a few years the writing was on the wall. In September 2014, Sumitomo and Vale shuttered the mine citing the downturn in the international coal market. Sumitomo said it would also take a writedown worth ¥30 billion ($11 million) on its Australian coal investments.
And as SMH tongue in cheekly adds, Isaac Plains was added to the long list of coal mines up for sale – but at a price. That price was finally revealed on Thursday: the princely sum of $1.
Why the complete collapse in price of the mine? Simple: blame China.
Those ghost cities are worth billions to Hollywood producers. They could destroy them at will for action flicks.
Look at that photo. Just so we’re clear, mines like that are where solar panels, wind turbines, and electric cars come from.