Conference Proceedings
1988 AusIMM New Zealand Branch Annual Conference - Investment in Mining
Conference Proceedings
1988 AusIMM New Zealand Branch Annual Conference - Investment in Mining
McKee Memorial Address - Investment in Mining People
Mr. Chairman, distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen._x000D_
Thank you for asking me to your conference, with its most fundamental and appropriate topic of 'Investment in Mining'._x000D_
I must confess at the outset that I am one of those Australians who has rarely visited your fair land of New Zealand. This is in fact only my third visit, with all three related to Institute Conferences, and all much too brief._x000D_
In so many ways your country provides a counterpoise to ours, despite the obvious disparities in size and population. And I am not only referring to the Bledisloe Cup! We would certainly each be much more lonely without the other, in this strange long-lost corner of the globe - if globes can have corners._x000D_
Such an important factor in common in our shared heritages has been the mineral industry we have won from our alluvials and our rocks- especially for gold._x000D_
So much of the major mineral developments which have supplied the world's appetite for metals and fuels in the past two hundred years has come from the countries settled in that period by people from Europe, especially those from the British Isles. So much of the technology for mineral and metal extraction has come from the skills of those people in New Zealand and Australia. And so much of the further development of metal processing and manufacturing of productive equipment has come from those people and from their cousins throughout the world._x000D_
It is, I believe, a fair question to ask why we have failed to build on those early and considerable successes, and why we have in so many ways apparently been so content to allow others to add value to our raw materials, and to take our technological developments on to levels far beyond those that our domestic markets could sustain.
Thank you for asking me to your conference, with its most fundamental and appropriate topic of 'Investment in Mining'._x000D_
I must confess at the outset that I am one of those Australians who has rarely visited your fair land of New Zealand. This is in fact only my third visit, with all three related to Institute Conferences, and all much too brief._x000D_
In so many ways your country provides a counterpoise to ours, despite the obvious disparities in size and population. And I am not only referring to the Bledisloe Cup! We would certainly each be much more lonely without the other, in this strange long-lost corner of the globe - if globes can have corners._x000D_
Such an important factor in common in our shared heritages has been the mineral industry we have won from our alluvials and our rocks- especially for gold._x000D_
So much of the major mineral developments which have supplied the world's appetite for metals and fuels in the past two hundred years has come from the countries settled in that period by people from Europe, especially those from the British Isles. So much of the technology for mineral and metal extraction has come from the skills of those people in New Zealand and Australia. And so much of the further development of metal processing and manufacturing of productive equipment has come from those people and from their cousins throughout the world._x000D_
It is, I believe, a fair question to ask why we have failed to build on those early and considerable successes, and why we have in so many ways apparently been so content to allow others to add value to our raw materials, and to take our technological developments on to levels far beyond those that our domestic markets could sustain.
Contributor(s):
A C Copeman
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- Published: 1988
- PDF Size: 0.782 Mb.
- Unique ID: P198811001