Mongolia unlikely to seal US$4 billion coal mine deal, says minister

A delayed US$4 billion deal aimed at spurring development of Mongolia’s enormous Tavan Tolgoi coal mine has only a slim chance of going ahead, partly due to China’s slowing growth, one of the country’s chief negotiators said on Thursday.
A plan for a consortium of Mongolian Mining, China’s Shenhua Energy and Japan’s Sumitomo to take over the operations of state-owned Erdenes Tavan Tolgoi was blocked by Mongolia’s parliament speaker in April, leaving the future of the deal in the hands of lawmakers.
Minister Mendsaikhan Enkhsaikhan, who led Mongolia’s negotiations with the consortium, told an investor conference in Ulaanbaatar he was pessimistic on the prospects of lawmakers clearing the deal.
"When we submitted the proposed agreement for the Tavan Tolgoi coal mine project, I said there was a 50-50 chance for approval," said Enkhsaikhan, the minister in charge of Mongolia’s so-called "mega projects".
"At this moment, it’s less than 10 per cent that it will be approved by parliament and will be implemented," he said.
In addition to indecision by the government, the deal was threatened by economic troubles in China.