Minsol Group Blogs
30 October 2014
Sourced from GasFields Commission Queensland
The GasFields Commission joined a group of Darling Downs landholders at a special briefing in Toowoomba this week to discuss the implementation of the State's new regional planning laws.
The meeting was hosted by Deputy Premier, Jeff Seeney and Agriculture Minister, John McVeigh with a group of about 30 landholders in attendance.
The Regional Planning Interests Act came into effect from June this year to provide a more balanced way ...
21 October 2014
Sourced from GasFields Commission Queensland
Queensland's Coal Seam Gas (CSG) Compliance Unit has resolved more than 80 percent of the 237 landholder enquiries it has received up to 30 September this year, covering a wide range of issues from bores, to CSG operations and land access.
CSG Compliance Unit with landholder
The CSG Compliance Unit undertakes industry compliance, auditing and engagement activities and includes groundwater experts, and specialists in petroleum and...
30 September 2014
Source: Corrs Chambers Westgarth, 30 July 2013
In a recent decision, the Land Court found that landowner time, in and of itself, is not recoverable as compensation under the Mineral Resources Act 1989 (Qld) (MRA).
The Court considered whether the scope of the compensation provisions in relation to the grant of a mining lease under the MRA allowed the recovery of landowner time. These compensation provisions are in all material respects the same as the compensation pro...
30 September 2014
Source: Minter Ellison Alert, 20 May 2013
Although not involving stamp duty, the recent case of Resource Capital Fund III LP v Commissioner of Taxation [2013] FCA 363 is a good reminder that the proper valuation of land interests held by mining entities is an important exercise in correctly determining the amount of any landholder or land rich duty payable on acquisitions of interests in the entity. The case also provides some guidance regarding the proper valuation of minin...
30 September 2014
Source: Corrs Chambers Westgarth, 21 August 2013
Resource companies must compensate land owners and occupiers for the effect of activities carried out on their land. But negotiating a Conduct and Compensation Agreement that satisfies both the resource company and the owner is not always easy. When negotiations stall, what are the dispute resolution options available to parties and which is best?
Resource companies generally cannot enter private land to undertake advanced ac...