Peter O'Neill to be invited to form government

Peter O'Neill and his political entourage arrive in Port Moresby by 2pm today and head off to attend the Return of Writs Ceremony at Government House starting at 3pm.
Thereafter he will formally receive his invitation to form government.

PNG LNG Project drilling starts at Hides


Esso Highlands Ltd has commenced drilling operations for the PNG LNG Project at the Hides natural gas field, located in the Southern Highlands province of Papua New Guinea.  
Rig 702 at Hides.-Picture courtesy of ESSO HIGHLANDS

The drill wells will produce approximately 9 trillion cubic feet of natural gas over the life of the project.  
“The PNG LNG Project is unique and important for Papua New Guinea.
“The start of our drilling programme is a key step in meeting our goal of first LNG deliveries in 2014,” said drilling manager Jim McDermott. 
 The specially-designed Nabors Rig 702 is being used to drill the initial well, the first of several natural gas production wells at Hides.
The rig has incorporated best-in-class features to help safely and effectively drill PNG’s world-class resource.
 It has been designed to withstand earthquakes and includes containment equipment and facilities to protect the environment.  
A second rig to be used in the PNG LNG Project drilling programme has arrived in PNG and is currently being transported to the Hides area.
“We have an exceptional team, including Papua New Guinean drilling engineers who recently returned from Melbourne, Australia, where they spent a year-and-a-half learning about ExxonMobil’s drilling operations.
 “They are now putting their training into practice,” McDermott said.

InterOil to farm-in PNG interest


InterOil Press Release

 InterOil Corporation has executed a farm-in agreement and related documents with Pacific Rubiales Energy Corp relating to its acquisition of a 10% net (12.9 percent gross) participating interest in Petroleum Prospecting License 237 ("PPL 237") onshore Papua New Guinea, including the Triceratops structure and exploration acreage located within that license.
This announcement is made further to the company's announcement on April 30, 2012 that it had entered into a heads of agreement ("HOA") with PRE and the terms are materially the same as those previously announced.
Execution of the farm-In agreement accomplishes one of the milestones contemplated to complete the farm-in transaction.
Completion of the farm-in transaction remains subject to satisfaction of additional conditions within 18 months, including execution of joint venture operating agreements with PRE, and PNG government approval.
Additionally, PRE has the option to terminate the farm-in agreement at various stages of the work programme and to be reimbursed up to US$96 million of the $116 million initial cash payment, which does not include carried costs, out of future upstream production proceeds.
Pacific LNG Operations Ltd,  an affiliate of Clarion Finanz AG,  and its affiliates ("PacLNG") are participating on a 25% beneficial equity basis in the portion of the farm-in transaction relating to the Triceratops structure, by reducing PacLNG's indirect participating interest in the Triceratops structure.
As a result, PacLNG will receive 25% of the payments PRE makes under the farm-in transaction relating to the Triceratops structure.
PacLNG will also receive a commission fee of 2.5%of cash payments made by Pacific Rubiales other than carry.
Certain other indirect participating interest holders may also participate in the farm-in transaction.
"InterOil and its partners are pleased to have completed execution of the farm-In agreement with Pacific Rubiales, a company with a track record of successful exploration and production development," said Phil Mulacek, chief executive officer of InterOil.
 "We look forward to completing the Pacific Rubiales farm-in, and to accelerating appraisal and development of the Triceratops gas and condensate field in Papua New Guinea."
Ronald Pantin, chief executive officer of Pacific Rubiales, commented: "We are very pleased to be partnered with InterOil and its management on what we believe to be a world class gas and condensate trend and which provides us with the strategic opportunity for early stage large resource capture on the doorstep of the world's fastest growing primary energy markets."

Pilot: O’Neill’s men punched me

By MALUM NALU

A HELICOPTER pilot claims he was assaulted by political minders in Alotau where members of the caretaker Prime Minister Peter O’Neill’s group are camped.
Pilot James Pima told The National he was assaulted by minders of the camp on Saturday when he landed Telikom technicians in Alotau.


Captain James Pima (second from left, with a black eye) with Telikom staff (from left) Pilol Iavia, Willie Monda and Julius Lepilis.-Picture by MALUM NALU
 A source at the Alotau camp confirmed that there was a confrontation but that there was no physical assault on the pilot.
“He happened to fly into a political camp on a Saturday with people who appeared to be ununiformed soldiers posing as Telikom technicians,” the source said.
“He was told to p*** off. He was trying to harass MPs who are there on their own volition for a retreat before the formation of government.”
Pima said, however, that his passengers were Telikom employees.
He said he was assaulted and was sporting a black eye and that he was forced to fly off in an overheated Heli Solutions helicopter.
That endangered the lives of his passengers, as well as travelling on an empty tank.
Pilots and civil aviation officials said on Saturday that threatening a pilot and endangering an aircraft was a very serious criminal offence.
Pima reported the matter to 6-Mile police after landing in Port Moresby on Saturday afternoon.
A shaken Pima and the three Telikom staff told reporters on Saturday in Port Moresby that the incident was totally uncalled for.
“This is the work of some low-life desperate political scumbag scavengers,” Pima said.
“Some are failed politicians who are leeches of politicians and maggots feeding off a weak and corrupt government and government systems.
“These spineless cowards wouldn’t compete and survive in a real world.”
Telikom staffer Pilol Iavia said they were in Alotau to restore microwave links.
“When we landed in Alotau, we were approached by a group of men who asked us what we were doing there.
“We explained that we were Telikom staff.
“They asked us to leave. The captain had a confrontation with the group of men.”
Pima said he had his shirt ripped off and was punched in the left eye

Former Aiyura principal congratulates Loujaya Toni

By DANIEL KUNERT
Former Principal
Aiyura National High School

Aloha!

The woman elected to represent the Lae Open seat is, as many of you already know, the Loujaya who was our student at Aiyura back in 1980-81: Loujaya Kousa at the time.
Daniel Kunert and wife Nancy

I know she has been very active in... various endeavors after she finished at UPNG, including, I believe, as a journalist, serving as editor of the Air Niugini in-flight magazine, writing and recording music, assisting in the production of some national celebrations, etc. She had had a book of her poetry published even before she started as a student at Aiyura.
I am wondering if this is going to start a trend......probably a very good trend....where, in situations where only one woman runs, it will be much easier for her to win the seat.....if they are still using the "first past the post" voting system (and still using the preferential version of that system). Let most of the men divide the male votes amongst them, and most of the female voters vote for the lone female candidate. (But it has been a long time since I served as an invigilator for a candidate for Parliament and I am not sure what has evolved in the past 25 years with regard to the voting system in PNG.) 
I have often felt that PNG will not be able to get on top of some of their very serious problems unless and until they have a much better representation of women at all levels of government, especially in Parliament. Congratulations to Loujaya!

Dan

Daniel J Kunert
1092 W Kawailani St
Hilo, HI 96720-3281

Detroit as Michigan's Next "Suburb"? Pleeaase.


The Future of Detroit, According to Karen Dumas


Sorry about the recent lack of activity on the blog.  I took a few days off and now I’m ready to get back into the swing of things.

Detroit, Detroit, Detroit.  Every time I try to leave you, you pull me back in.

There was an editorial opinion piece in the Detroit News last week that really caught my attention.  It was from Karen Dumas, a former press secretary to Detroit Mayor Dave Bing.  She brought up an important point that underscores the fear of much of black Detroit (indeed, blacks in many central cities), and exposes the general lack of knowledge about planning and urbanism best practices.

Ms. Dumas calls attention to the quiet conversation going on in many cities across the country, particularly those with significant black populations.  While it’s been slow-going and generally under the radar, Detroit has experienced an influx of young, educated – and mostly white – newcomers seeking to settle the new urban frontier.  They are bringing with them a collection of new ideas about community, the built environment and how to do business in the Motor City.  She also cites those she calls “native” Detroiters – mostly black, often undereducated and unemployed, who have been patiently awaiting the renaissance of the city.

This is where it gets tricky.  Ms. Dumas mentions that the newcomers enter the city with expectations of certain amenities: bike lanes on streets, bike racks at bus stops, outdoor café dining and upscale shopping opportunities, among others.  Then she says that the addition of these amenities ultimately make the city become more suburban.

More suburban?  Really?  REALLY?

The transformation is indeed underway in Detroit.  I haven’t been back to verify this personally in some time, but much of what I’ve read over the past couple years seems to confirm this.  Downtown has benefitted from an influx of corporate relocations spurred on by billionaire Dan Gilbert of Quicken Loans fame.  Wayne State University, the Henry Ford Health Systems and the Detroit Medical Center have worked together to revitalize the city’s Midtown and New Center areas.  Yesterday’s announcement of $44 million in federal and state grant dollars to complete the Detroit Riverwalk is another indication of a positive step forward that could catalyze revitalization.

Calling these actions “suburban” is absurd.

As Ms. Dumas states, Detroit is urban.  In its core areas, the city is a mix of large and small homes, small apartment buildings and large multifamily developments, warehouse buildings, retail and office uses, and industrial sites.  In fact, in its core areas Detroit is definitively urban.

Detroit’s future is in embracing its urbanity and becoming even moreso.  The transformation taking place is allowing this to happen.  For Detroit to prosper, this transformation must happen, and quickly.

Among its myriad issues, I’ve long believed that Detroit city leaders have had an unwillingness to improve the city’s built environment.  Actually, phrasing it as an unwillingness is putting it kindly; it’s probably more correct to say that city leaders have been clueless on how to improve the built environment.  I’ve mentioned before in the article that led to the creation of this blog that much of Detroit suffers from a bland, rigid and numbing built environment of small homes, bleak commercial corridors and empty industrial sites.  But city leaders have done next to nothing to improve the appearance and cohesion of the city’s neighborhoods.  Instead, they’ve chosen to wait for improved economic conditions that would enrich locals, who would in turn make private investment improvements.

Where is the city leadership in that strategy?

In my mind, another deeply embedded reason why Detroit leadership hasn’t taken the lead on improving the city aesthetic is because it did not want to catalyze actual revitalization.  The elephant in the room is gentrification, which is perceived as a threat to the city’s power structure.

Now we’re getting closer to the heart of Ms. Dumas’ premise.  Sadly, that premise is uninformed.

First, there is nothing uniquely “suburban” about bike lanes, community gardens, and alfresco dining.  The fact is, you find very little of that in typical suburban locales, at least not surrounded by a parking lot.  Where do you find it?  In cities (and yes, some older suburban communities) that seek to employ their niche in the diverse tapestry that is a metropolitan area.  Adding these amenities is as urban as it gets.

Sometimes I feel that while Detroit has endured its decline over the last fifty-plus years, its leaders have chosen to turn a total blind eye to the urban planning policies and practices that have been proven to work in cities across the country.  Have they never heard of the values and virtues of New Urbanism or Smart Growth practices, or just blatantly ignored them?  I suggest the latter, judging by Ms. Dumas’ piece, because of feared loss of political power.

Seriously, Detroiters like Ms. Dumas must ask themselves:

Do they want more of this:

 Or more of this:





Both images are in Detroit -- the first in Midtown, the second near my old neighborhood on the northwest side.  Detroit has little that looks like the former, and a whole lot that looks like the latter.


There are many things that Detroit needs to do, but if Detroit is to ever make a comeback it must do three things: 1) build a new economy that is enriching and sustainable, 2) embrace and build on its urban character, and 3) appeal to a broad and diverse range of “customers”. 

So many cities around the country have done those three things; why has Detroit struggled to do that?  Detroit has always waited for auto industry rebounds to determine its economic fortunes instead of using it as a foundation for other growth; the city has never embraced its “cityness” like others have; and it hasn’t brought in the amenities or improved its public infrastructure to offer residents a better quality of life.

“Native” Detroiters like Ms. Dumas will have to rid themselves of the divisive old-timers/newcomers dynamic and realize that change is at the heart of working and thriving cities.  They must assert themselves as part of the revitalization process, learn what newcomers have learned from other locales, and offer direction on how it can be used here.

Michael Malabag storms home in Moresby North West

Unionist Micheal Malabag got home in a photo-finish against Miria Ikupu 9, 351 votes to 9, 334 in the Moresby North West Seat today.
Michael Malabag

 Malabag picked up 906 votes from woman candidate Janet Sape to storm home.
Declaration is expected to be done tomorrow.

Loujaya Toni keeps the Lae fire alive


By ARMSTRONG SAIYAMA
Divine Word University Journalism Student

LONE female candidate Loujaya Toni is the new member elect for the Lae Open seat.
Toni has polled 7,364 votes ahead of the businessman Fred Wak with 5,842 votes and sitting MP Bart Philemon trailing third with 4,680 votes.
The horse trading has already started and new Lae MP Elect Loujaya Toni is no exception, as this picture of her being courted by Peter O'Neill's People's National Congress this morning shows. PNC sent a plane to whisk her out of Nadab Airport this morning.-Picture by MICHAEL J EARLEY

Toni has won over the 50 +1 majority of 6,004 votes in this male-dominated race.
Former journalist, teacher, poet cum gospel singer Loujaya Toni is running under the ticket of Indigenous People’s Party.
The Masters Degree in Communication Development Studies graduate from the PNG University of Technology said she could use her knowledge and experiences to bring holistic development in her Lae electorate. 
Toni told The National in an exclusive interview earlier in this year with her at her residence at the Busurum Compound. 
“I understand human beings and basics of not only to look after people within Lae electorate, I also understand how we can develop together our human resources and how to communicate development,” she said.
“I’m confident with the level of qualifications that I have and that confidence that I am delivering to the voters.
“I’m pressing people to take ownership of my policies and seeing them as theirs."
Toni has challenged 30 male candidates including the veteran Minister of Public Service Bart Philemon.
The Butibam villager said she has ousted her grandfather Philemon to show a new type of leadership in the Lae Open seat.
 “I am working with all the candidates in the Lae Open seat, I see all of them as my brothers and except Bart Philemon who is my grandfather,” Toni said.
“I’m banking on the fact that I see all candidates as brothers and Philemon as grandfather, I’m very confident that I’m in every body’s three leaf combination."
Her winning is the manifestation of her creative drive to tap into second and third choices of this male dominated race.
Toni has been running under the banner of “Make a difference: Vote for a woman".
“I never support the reserve seats and I’m excited in the prospects of running this election," she said.
“Male candidates can’t handle women’s issues, men deal with big issues and women’s issues are not on men’s agenda.
“A woman is qualified in home economics and in human resource development.
“Naturally, women are interested in talking of human resource development and want our children to have good education, good health and good life.
“We, the women are practicing real home economics and human resource development in the home governments, and we women are expanding our areas of governance into the next level,” she said.
Toni says that her policies are to touch the people and changed the people’s lives.
“I would empower and up skill the customary Ahi land owners, squatter settlers, women, old people, orphans, youth, people living with HIV/AIDS and people living with disability,” she said.
“ I have  plans to organise pensions for old people, create sheltered workShops for people living with disability, Improve alternative healthcare and homecare for people living with HIV/AIDS, employment and training programmes for youth, programmes for orphans, develop cottage industry for women, downstream processing of local products and establish a council of chiefs for the  Ahi people,” Toni said.
She said her push is for PNG to meet the 2015 United Nation’s Millennium Development Goals.
“I will provide a report card of my electorate to the United Nations in 2015," Toni said,
 “That involves providing a report card to make myself accountable to the Lae voters and transparent to the international community.
“I have 100 days in office plan and a  five-year development plan for Lae Open electorate."
This is her second time to contest the Lae Open seat to win this seat.
Toni came fifth out of the 25 candidates in the 2007 national election and she came third in the 2008 Ahi local level government presidential race.

Loujaya Toni unseats Bart Philemon in Lae

By MATHEW KEPAS
NBC, Lae
Woman leader LoujayaToni is the new Lae MP, unseating Bart Philemon, who has been in the seat since 1992.
Toni celebrates her win yesterday.-Picture by JOANNE PENNINAH KARO
Toni yesterday polled 7,364 votes ahead of her closest rival , businessman Fred Wak, 5,842 to win.  She is the second woman candidate to be declared over the weekend, after Delilah Gore unseated  Anthony Nene, for Sohe Open Seat in Oro (Northern) province on Saturday. 
 Toni has pledged to the people of Lae that in her term as their member for the next five years, her biggest aim would be to fulfil the United Nations agenda of poverty alleviation.
She says she will honour God and join the Government of the day and work towards providing a report card to the UN General Assembly by 2015, to say that Lae District is serious in dealing with poverty alleviation.
And in order to achieve that the member elect says Lae district must first of all develop a biometric data base to keep an accurate account of its population firgures including other important statistics to match development trends.
Toni revealed these in her victory speech after her declaration at 2.30 yesterday afternoon at the Sir Ignatius Sporting complex in Lae.
She polled 7, 364 votes going past the absolute majority vote of 6,000-plus to beat the runner-up Fred Wak who scored 5842 votes.
The 29th and final exclusion in the race was that of sitting member and New Generation party leader Bart Philemon. 
 Philemon had been the member for Lae for the last 20 years and it took a relative and a woman to unseat him in this general elections under the Preferential Voting System.

Lae MP Bart Philemon fighting for survival

By MATHEW KEPAS
NBC Lae

The Leader of the New Generation Party and sitting member for Lae Open Bart Philemon is fighting for his political survival as counting slowly winds down in the Lae Open seat.
Philemon...fighting for survival

This follows the 27th elimination late this afternoon and the consequent suspension of counting until tomorrow morning at the Sir Ignatius Kilage stadium in Lae.
After the 27th exclusion Mr Philemon is running third with 4297 votes.
Lae businessman Fred Wak has skipped away with 5151 votes while, in second spot is woman candidate Loujoya Toni is on 4801 votes.
Constitutional Democratic Party candidate Micah Parimani Vines is fourth and the tail end of the field with 4234 votes.
Parimani will be the 28th exclusion when counting resumes tomorrow morning.

First woman elected in PNG elections

Delilah Gore has just beaten her former boss and, Anthony Nene, for Sohe Open Seat in Oro (Northern) province.
Gore has just been declared winner as a member of Don Polye's Triumph Heritage Empowerment (THE) Party.
Since the start of the polls she has maintained a very good lead over all challengers for the Sohe Open Seat.
"When I left office I went to all four districts," she told NBC Radio.
"I went out empowering women and youths.
"I told women to vote for women, and that's what they did."
She said her focus would be on rural development.
"We have lacked government services for a long time," Gore said.

Cebu top business, tourism hub

By MALUM NALU
 
Cebu City, where Air Niugini is commencing twice weekly flights, is the oldest city in the Philippines.
Filipino dancers welcoming the PNG delegation to Cebu on Monday night

It is part of Cebu, a province in the Philippines, consisting of Cebu Island and 167 surrounding islands.
Cebu is one of the most-developed provinces in the Philippines, with Cebu City as the main centre of commerce, trade, education and industry in the Visayas.
IT Park, Cebu City, a place of great shopping, cafes and restaurants
 Condé Nast Traveler Magazine named Cebu the 7th best island destination in the Indian Ocean-Asia region in 2007, 8th best Asian-Pacific island destination in 2005, 7th in 2004 and in 2009.
A colourful jeepney along the streets of Cebu City
 It is located to the east of Negros, to the west of Leyte and Bohol islands. Cebu is a long narrow island stretching 225 kilometers from north to south, surrounded by 167 neighbouring, smaller islands, which include Mactan, Bantayan, Malapascua, Olango and the Camotes Islands.
Mactan-Cebu International Airport, where Air Niugini is flying to, is located in Mactan Island, and is the second busiest airport in the Philippines after Manila.
The Air Niugini Boeing 737 being welcomed at Cebu City Mactan International Airport on Monday night

Cebu businessman Mel Oplimo, who has business links with PNG, said Air Niugini could not go wrong as Cebu was the business and tourism hub of the Phillipines.
Ayala Centre, one of the biggest shopping malls in the Philippines
“We enjoy the splendor and beauty of Cebu,”he told The National in Cebu.
“Cebu is known for its semi-conductor industry, furniture industry, shipping, travel and tourism.
Oplimo (right), me and video cameraman Tapusi Kone outside the Ayala Centre mall
“Cebu is known as a rest and recreation area and most entrepreneurs and Chinese tycoons come from Cebu.
“Cebu is known as a tourism hub.
“It has been declared as one of the best destinations for tourism in Asia because of its pristine white beaches and hotel services.”

Telikom eyes retail service


TELIKOM PNG will be restructured and refinanced to become a national telecommunications retail service provider, Public Enterprises Minister Sir Mekere Morauta announced last night, The National reports.
 Speaking at the launch of the information “Super Highway” in Lae, he said the National Transmission Network  (NTN) was  essentially an integrated optical fibre, satellite and microwave network to be controlled by a new company called DataCo, which was recently set up as part of the NTN plan.
DataCo will own and operate the network as a wholesale provider of telecommunications.
 “This role will become increasingly important, given the need to provide strong competition to Digicel, and to meet growing mobile phone demand in rural and remote areas,” Sir Mekere said.
“It is estimated that capital funding of K500 million will be required under the NTN plan to cover the cost of assets owned by Telikom and PNG Power, repair and maintenance of existing infrastructure, the building of new infrastructure and the restructuring and recapitalising of Telikom.
Sir Mekere said K5 million of that funding has already been supplied by IPBC to get this K5.6 million “missing link” project completed.
“Telikom did not have the funds to pay, so IPBC paid, in order to complete this much-needed link.”
Sir Mekere said DataCo would be required to meet community service obligations, for which a policy was being developed, and funding may be needed to cover the CSO-driven extension of telecommunications services into areas of the country that may not be profitable.
“I am hopeful that the incoming Government will see the wisdom and enormous benefit of providing some of the total K500 million required for the NTN through the Sovereign Wealth Fund, through a funding cell created to recapitalise and rehabilitate SOEs, a concept I developed and recommended to the government with exactly this sort of application in mind.
“This plan represents a new start for telecommunications, which is one of the most important drivers of national development.
“Telecommunications has been an obstacle to growth and prosperity, and the NTN plan is a way to remove that obstacle and spur new growth.”

Information ‘super highway’ launched

PUBLIC Enterprises Minister Sir Mekere Morauta says the launch of the K5.6 million information “super highway” in Lae last night should serve as an example of how the incoming government should do business, The National reports.
He said when launching the project at the Lae International Hotel that the government clearly had the tools to provide critical national infrastructure and affordable, reliable and efficient services, and more so when the Sovereign Wealth Fund was in place.
Telikom acting chief executive officer Charles Litau (left) and National Planning Minister Sam Basil looking on as Sir Mekere unveils the plaque marking the launching of the information "super highway" in Lae last night.-Nationalpic by LARRY ANDREW

The “super highway” will provide the link to allow the expansion of high-speed internet, data and voice services to private and corporate customers across the nation.
It fills in what is known as the “missing link” in PNG’s telecommunications system between Lae and Madang, where the international submarine cable comes ashore.
Sir Mekere said the activation of this cable was part of a transformation of the social and economic landscape of PNG – the telecommunications revolution.
“The take-up of mobile phones and internet services since then has revolutionised our personal and business interactions,” he said.
“Our relationship with the rest of the world and to each other will never be the same owing to our new and broad-based ease of access to knowledge and ideas, to money and resources, to new organisations and interest groups, to different cultures.”
“The telecommunications revolution, most visible in the form of mobile phone towers, is spreading into some of the most remote parts of the country.”
Sir Mekere said revamping the national telecommunications network would make a significant contribution to national economic development and to improved delivery of services, especially to rural and remote areas.
“The National Transmission Network  (NTN) is essentially an integrated fibre optics, satellite and microwave network to be controlled by a new company called DataCo, which was recently set up as part of the NTN plan,” Sir Mekere  said.
“DataCo will own and operate the network as a wholesale provider of telecommunications.”
It will consist of:
  • Telikom’s existing domestic microwave, satellite and fibre optics network, with the international gateways (Port Moresby and Lae) and optical fibre submarine cable international links;
  • PNG Power’s fibre optics ground wire throughout PNG (to which Madang link is part) and;
  • The government’s interest in a 750km optical fibre cable being built to support the PNG LNG project.
“Other elements will include upgrades of existing telecommunications infrastructure and investment in new infrastructure,” Sir Mekere said.
“A feasibility study into how DataCo will manage the system has already begun.
“DataCo will be required to meet community service obligations, for which a policy is being developed, and funding may be needed to cover the CSO-driven extension of telecommunications services into areas of the country that may not be profitable.
“I am hopeful that the incoming government will see the benefit of providing some of the total K500 million required through the Sovereign Wealth Fund, through a funding cell created to recapitalise and rehabilitate SOEs, a concept I developed and recommended to the government with exactly this sort of application in mind.”

Sir Mekere Morauta: 'Missing link' no longer missing


Speech by Rt Hon Mekere Morauta KCMG MP
Minister for Public Enterprises
To mark the completion of the Lae-Madang optical fibre telecommunications link
July 19 2012

Ladies and Gentlemen, Madang is about 300 kilometres from Lae.  The trip takes just under an hour, by Bird of Paradise.
Sir Mekere Morauta

Light travels at about 300,000 kilometres per second.  So the light signal that carries our messages between the two cities over the new fibre-optic cable that we will switch on tomorrow takes 1 millisecond to complete the journey.
In reality that is too short to make any sense at all to the ordinary man or woman such as you and I. No normal person would notice the passing of such a brief moment in time – the journey might as well be instantaneous.
What we will notice, however, is a big improvement in our telecommunications, in particular internet access speeds and mobile phone communications.
The activation of this cable is part of a transformation of the social and economic landscape of Papua New Guinea – the telecommunications revolution.
Much of what is happening is a result of some visionary work done by my Government between 1999 and 2002.
My decision to introduce competition into the telecommunications sector opened the door to Digicel, and that one decision has changed our world forever.
The take-up of mobile phones and internet services since then has revolutionised our personal and business interactions.
Our relationship with the rest of the world and to each other will never be the same owing to our new and broad-based ease of access to knowledge and ideas, to money and resources, to new organisations and interest groups, to different cultures.
And the change is not only limited to our major cities, where in the past it has tended to be confined for very long periods.  The telecommunications revolution, most visible in the form of mobile phone towers, is spreading into some of the most remote parts of the country.
But we could have done so much better had more reforms been undertaken, rather than being blocked or thrown out by the Somare regime.  In the past 10 years little of significance has been undertaken to repair and extend our national physical and economic infrastructure.
Our Public Enterprises, charged with delivering some of our most important services, have been left under-funded and without policy direction; they have been abused and manipulated for political purposes, and they have been treated as a personal fiefdom.
They have lacked the skills, the political leadership and the capital to make serious progress on providing affordable, reliable and effective services to the people.
National development has stagnated.
My reforms since becoming Minister in August last year have focussed on giving IPBC and Public Enterprises a strong framework on which to provide those services.
I have concentrated my efforts on giving them clear and consistent direction from government, on making sure they are fully accountable and transparent, and that they operate on fully commercial terms.
The SOEs have now developed annual business plans and budgets and these have been approved by the IPBC Board and National Executive Council for the very first time.\
The Annual Plans and Budgets entrench within IPBC and Public Enterprises a continuous review and improvement cycle that focus on financial efficiency and commercial discipline, good governance and due process, and reaching acceptable levels of customer service.
Ladies and gentlemen, I hope this project is an example of how the incoming government will do business – it clearly now has the tools to provide critical national infrastructure and affordable, reliable and efficient services.
In August last year the O’Neill-Namah Government identified this project as a priority and the IPBC board approved the funding.  At K5.6 million, the project is not big, but its impact will be very significant indeed. 
It fills in what is known as the “Missing Link” in our telecommunications system between here and Madang, where the international submarine cable comes ashore.
It uses an existing PNG Power optical fibre built to support the Ramu electricity transmission system. It involved installing various pieces of power and telecommunications equipment and constructing support facilities along the route.
Providing the link will allow the expansion of high-speed internet, data and voice services to private and corporate customers across the nation.
It will also allow Telikom to go ahead with overdue repairs to the APNG international submarine telecommunications cable, which has been operating at 50 per cent capacity for some time.
And most importantly for the future, the optical fibre link will form part of the National Transmission Network, which IPBC recently began work on.
Revamping the national telecommunications network will make a significant contribution to national economic development and to improved delivery of services, especially to rural and remote areas.
The National Transmission Network is essentially an integrated optical fibre, satellite and microwave network to be controlled by a new company called DataCo, which was recently set up as part of the NTN plan.
DataCo will own and operate the network as a wholesale provider of telecommunications. It will initially consist of:
  •  Telikom’s existing domestic microwave, satellite and optical fibre network, with the international gateways (Port Moresby and Lae) and optical fibre submarine cable international links;
  •  PNG Power’s Optical Fibre Ground Wire throughout Papua New Guinea (of which this Madang link is part) and;
  •  The Government’s interest in a 750-kilometre optical fibre cable being built to support the PNG LNG project.
Other elements will include upgrades of existing telecommunications infrastructure and investment in new infrastructure.
A feasibility study into how DataCo will manage the system has already begun.
Telikom PNG will be restructured and refinanced to become a national telecommunications retail service provider. This role will become increasingly important given the need to provide strong competition to Digicel, and to meet growing mobile phone demand in rural and remote areas.
It is estimated that capital funding of K500 million will be required under the NTN plan to cover the cost of assets owned by Telikom and PNG Power, repair and maintenance of existing infrastructure, the building of new infrastructure and the restructuring and recapitalising of Telikom.
K5 million of that funding has already been supplied by IPBC to get this K5.6 million Missing Link project completed.  Telikom did not have the funds to pay, so IPBC paid, in order to complete this much-needed link.
DataCo will be required to meet Community Service Obligations, for which a policy is being developed, and funding may be needed to cover the CSO-driven extension of telecommunications services into areas of the country that may not be profitable.
I am hopeful that the incoming Government will see the wisdom and enormous benefit of providing some of the total K500 million required for the NTN through the Sovereign Wealth Fund, through a funding cell created to recapitalise and rehabilitate SOEs, a concept I developed and recommended to the Government with exactly this sort of application in mind.
This plan represents a new start for telecommunications, which is one of the most important drivers of national development.
Telecommunications has been an obstacle to growth and prosperity, and the NTN plan is a way to remove that obstacle and spur new growth.
It should be seen in the context of several other nationally significant projects that IPBC and its Public Enterprises have, all of them much bigger than this Lae-Madang telecommunications link.
Work began two months ago on the K740-million expansion of Lae’s port capacity, with completion expected in 2015.  Planning work has also begun on the relocation of the Port Moresby wharves, which is a K1 billion-plus project.
Substantial repairs and maintenance to the Yonki power station are expected to be finished this year, and the expansion of output through a new mini-hydro power station at the foot of the Yonki dam is expected next year.
A final feasibility study is under way for a proposed K2 billion expansion of the entire Ramu hydro scheme.
IPBC has also received approval from National Executive Council to go ahead with feasibility and planning studies for a number of new power schemes, including the Purari River scheme.
Finally, we are at an advanced planning and feasibility stage for a significant upgrade of the Port Moresby sewerage system.
All of these schemes are of great national significance, as well as being important to cities such as Port Moresby and Lae.
They have the capacity to transform national, regional and local economies, providing the stimulus for economic growth, wealth generation and a broad improvement in the quality of life of all Papua New Guineans.
I hope that turning on this small but highly significant link marks the start of a new era in national development and service delivery to the people.