Mr Greg Dean-Jones This is Me
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AME Mineral Economics
Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
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This profile was automatically generated using 26 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
This profile was automatically generated using 26 references found on the Internet. This information has not been verified. Learn more...
View all 26 references Web References
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1. corpwatch.live.radicaldesigns.org
corpwatch.live.radicaldesigns. - [Cached]Published on: 4/16/2008 Last Visited: 4/23/2008
Australia is "an obvious target," says Greg Dean-Jones, an analyst at AME Mineral Economics. -
2. Thermal coal prices seen remaining high
news.ninemsn.com.au/article.as - [Cached]Published on: 10/10/2004 Last Visited: 10/10/2004
AME's thermal coal analyst Greg Dean-Jones said demand would be sustained by global economic growth and increased electricity generation.
"Coal is the world's most rapidly growing source of primary energy with international growth running at an average annual rate of around five per cent over the past four years and 10 per cent in the key Asia-Pacific region," Mr Dean-Jones said.
He said traded thermal coal demand was expected to exceed 500 million tonnes (Mt)this year and is forecast to reach 560Mt by the end of the decade. -
3. Coal ship queues grow - BusinessNews - www.smh.com.au
smh.com.au/articles/2004/02/09 - [Cached]Last Visited: 2/10/2004
The delays "have removed some shipping capacity from international shipping routes because, while the ships are queued up at the port waiting to load coal they're not being effective," said Greg Dean-Jones, principal coal analyst at AME Mineral Economics in Sydney. >

