3 November 2018, The Guardian, Adani yet to sign royalties deal despite claiming to be close to financing mine. The Adani mining company has still not signed a royalties agreement with the Queensland government, despite its claims to be just weeks away from green-lighting the Carmichael mine. This week, Adani’s Australian mining head, Lucas Dow, gave a series of interviews claiming the company was close to financing a slimmed-down, $2bn integrated Carmichael mine, rail and port proposal. Analysts say the strategy is to get the mine into production while spending as little upfront cash as possible. Guardian Australia understands it relies heavily on vendor financing agreements, in which payments to contractors and suppliers are effectively withheld for several years. Adani now insists it can start Carmichael for a fraction of the investment previously required. But Queensland government sources say the slimmed-down plan calls into question Adani’s eligibility to delay payment of royalties.The Queensland treasurer, Jackie Trad, confirmed in a statement that Adani had not yet signed any royalties deal. The government and Adani reached an in-principle agreement about royalties 18 months ago that it is understood would have allowed Adani to defer royalty payments analysts estimate are worth up to $315m in the early years of production. Three days before that agreement was reached, the government adopted a “transparent framework” to allow “first movers” in resource areas to defer royalty payments, which would accrue interest. The framework also served as a compromise to secure support from members of Labor’s left faction uncomfortable with providing direct assistance to Adani. “Our position was originally put to Adani in May last year and we are awaiting their agreement to these terms,” Trad told the Guardian on Friday. Guardian Australia understands clauses in that framework now appear problematic for any formal royalties deal. Access more here