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Ann: GENERAL: CRP: Chatham issues 21 November Update

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    • Release Date: 21/11/14 14:24
    • Summary: GENERAL: CRP: Chatham issues 21 November Update
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    					CRP
    21/11/2014 14:24
    GENERAL
    
    REL: 1424 HRS Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited
    
    GENERAL: CRP: Chatham issues 21 November Update
    
    Update
    21 November 2014
    
    Hearings finished - hopefully
    After 26 days over seven weeks and three locations, the team had a welcome
    debrief over a relaxed lunch and a glass of wine.
    
    James Winchester and Hamish Harwood from Simpson Grierson took nearly four
    hours to present the compelling arguments of our closing statement on
    Wednesday to the Decision-Making Committee with a public gallery of
    shareholders, and industry and government participants.
    
    At the end of our submission DMC chair Neil Walter said the committee would
    now consider whether it has sufficient information to formally close the
    hearing. It then has 20 working days to consider its decision, currently
    scheduled to be made around 18 December.
    
    Mr Walter said the committee adjourned rather than closed the hearing so they
    could decide if there were any outstanding issues - particularly related to
    our updated proposed conditions for consent. He said the committee will
    decide on the closing in the next couple of weeks and will then advise the
    date of the decision.
    
    (Note these are detailed conditions CRP has drafted, based on feedback from
    expert witnesses.  If you have noted some late submissions on the EPA website
    on the topic, don't read too much in to them - they are simply opinions from
    members of the public.)
    
    We, along with other submitters, were also asked to nominate which of four
    options the DMC should choose, being three levels of grant or a decline.  We
    argued there was ample evidence to approve the full consent sought by CRP,
    being mining for up to 35 years across the marine consent area.
    
    Asked whether an option to grant consent for the smaller mining permit area
    for 15 years was workable, we said it was not our preference (because of
    future consenting costs and process - but it would be obviously better than
    trial mining or a decline).  We noted the option would involve legal and
    practical issues such as undertaking monitoring in a wider area, and
    providing for mining exclusion zones.
    
    Which means?
    We remain hopeful a decision can be delivered before Christmas but indicated
    in our submission if the committee needs more time we're ok with that.
    
    We remain very confident we will get a positive decision - the focus seems
    very much on how we can get across the line, rather than why we should not.
    
    Time delays add cost though...so you can see where I'm going.  The process
    has meant CRP commissioning further reports and late witnesses to ensure we
    presented the strongest case possible. We think it was money well spent but
    it was additional to our budgets.
    
    In addition the EPA's costs are higher than their budgets.  We're
    scrutinising them line-by-line but it looks like we'll still be in for costs
    higher than planned.
    
    So we're still looking for more cash. If you would like to support the cause
    further, please talk to me this week as this is a limited opportunity at a
    discount to current market.
    
    Closing submission
    Our submission focused on the project's merits but also made some
    observations about:
    
    - Serious problems relating to the staff reports
    - Possible improvements to the Crown's involvement in our hearing process;
    its focus was limited to conservation issues rather than considering broader
    economic impacts or those related to farming or fishing.
    - Submitters either misrepresenting or failing to understand the key issues
    and not approaching the hearing in a constructive manner.
    Our closing submission said our proposal involves very limited environmental
    risks in a small area. Put simply it's a good project worthy of consent, with
    economic, strategic and environmental benefits and is an opportunity for New
    Zealand that shouldn't be missed.
    
    Even the opposing experts agreed that it will not harm any other industry or
    resource user in New Zealand's economy.  There are effects on the environment
    (primarily benthic habitats and organisms), but not of a scale significant in
    the Chatham Rise or EEZ,  nor of such significance in terms of the intrinsic
    conservation value. The few material risks are all manageable under the
    framework of conditions CRP proposes and risks should be the focus of the
    DMC's consideration.
    
    Fishing and Existing Interests
    The areas mined will be small compared to the marine consent area - just 0.6%
    year or 8.6% over 15 years or 20% over 35 years, with proposed mining
    exclusion areas covering 19% of the marine consent area, almost equivalent to
    the maximum area that could be mined.
    
    That's miniscule on an EEZ-wide scale. In contrast fishing activities cause
    significant environmental effects on the Chatham Rise through dragging heavy
    trawling equipment over extensive areas, damaging sensitive benthic organisms
    (including corals) and generating sediment plumes in areas where commercial
    fish species accumulate. The annual average trawl footprint over recent
    fishing years on the Chatham Rise has been 17,791 km2.
    
    The effects of fishing activities must be considered when assessing the
    nature, scale, and significance of the effects of CRP's proposal. Despite
    widespread destruction, damage and removal of fauna such as sponges and
    corals, there are no reported significant ecosystem effects from this habitat
    loss - fishermen catch their quota from the same places year after year.
    
    Cultural Interests
    We also said the EEZ Act does not, except in limited circumstances, provide
    for a cultural interest to be an existing interest. The location of the
    proposal must also be relevant.
    
    What is the basis for an existing interest from a cultural perspective being
    claimed for an area of seabed 450km from the mainland and 250km from the
    Chatham Islands?  What is the lawfully established existing activity that
    takes place there or would otherwise be affected by the proposal if it is not
    fishing?
    
    Because social and cultural factors are absent from the EEZ Act definition of
    "sustainable management" the focus of the DMC's decision must be on economic
    and environmental considerations. This view is supported
    By legal advice provided last week by the DMC's own lawyer.
    
    Sufficient Information
    The models used in evidence are based on significant data which we've always
    accepted would need some final validation.  Given the significant input data
    there should be no difficulty for the DMC concluding the information provided
    met the EEZ Act's definition of best available information.
    
    Regarding Benthic Protection Areas, we said there would be benefits if a more
    refined series of protected areas was created. CRP's proposed non-mining
    areas and its best endeavours to achieve full legal protection for them could
    be an important first step and an initiative that CRP would take great pride
    in pioneering. Given the vacuum of national ocean management policy that is
    all that can realistically be done at this time.
    
    EPA Staff Reports
    We continue to be concerned about the staff reports regarding issues of bias,
    fairness, natural justice, lack of expertise, timeliness, relevance, and the
    level of assistance they provide to the DMC.
    
    The EPA staff's answers to questions when under cross examination also raised
    many concerns including their failures to have read or understood relevant
    documents, their ability  to assess CRP's effects and issues in context or
    even to appropriately interpret the Act and to arrive at a correct legal
    view.
    
    They couldn't explain how and why the organisation had made decisions or
    reached a view as to how the Act should be applied and had either
    misunderstood or were ignorant of the expert evidence presented and which was
    not now in dispute.
    
    They did not understand even basic scientific issues and were unwilling to
    advise the DMC about possible conditions or how it should approach various
    evidential issues.  Instead they adopted an unduly negative and conservative
    assessment,  falling back on "uncertainty" without putting it into any
    context.
    
    For all those reasons we don't think the DMC should place weight on any staff
    findings and we certainly don't think we should be expected to pay for work
    which has added no value to the process and provided no material assistance
    to the DMC.
    
    Further, staff reports are not required under the EEZ Act at all and are
    merely a practice the EPA staff have
    adopted for some reason best known to themselves. However, it's obvious that
    staff reports are at best a complication and at worst a hindrance to the
    marine consent process.
    
    Project Summary
    To sum up, the project offers new environmental benefits for New Zealand's
    farming industry, by using a low cadmium, low carbon footprint, low run-off,
    potentially organic product. It will create a new industry with strong ties
    to agriculture, New Zealand's most important export earner. CRP's product
    will enhance security of supply and reduce exposure to politically risky
    sources of a critical input to New Zealand's biggest industry.
    
    Last Thought
    If you need another reason why this project is important consider the comment
    from Rabobank board member Berry Martin to the F20 (the farmers global
    meeting held to coincide with the G20 in Australia).
    
    "We need to double world food production by 2050 but with half the resources.
     We are already using more than one planet's resources so we need to be more
    efficient."
    
    If you want to read the whole submission go to:
    http://www.epa.govt.nz/EEZ/chatham_rock_phosphate/hearing/daily_transcripts_p
    roceedings/Pages/Hearing-Day-26.aspx
    
    Chris Castle, Managing Director
    [email protected] or +64 21 55 81 85
    End CA:00257965 For:CRP    Type:GENERAL    Time:2014-11-21 14:24:18
    				
 
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