CRP chatham rock phosphate limited

Ann: GENERAL: CRP: Chatham Rock Phosphate - low i

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    • Release Date: 03/09/13 14:53
    • Summary: GENERAL: CRP: Chatham Rock Phosphate - low impact high value resource
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    CRP
    03/09/2013 12:53
    GENERAL
    
    REL: 1253 HRS Chatham Rock Phosphate Limited
    
    GENERAL: CRP: Chatham Rock Phosphate - low impact high value resource
    
    Media Release
    3 September 2013
    Low impact and high value; seabed rock phosphate is of national significance
    
    Chatham Rock Phosphate today refuted the misinformation media campaign being
    run by the Deep Water Group and questioned fish trawling's environmental
    record.
    In media articles George Clement of the Deep Water Group has described
    Chatham's proposal to extract rock phsophate as a potential environmental
    "catastrophe".
    "Such descriptions could be applied to fishing, when you think about the vast
    area of sea floor trawling disturbs," Managing Director Chris Castle said.
    "Chatham's planned 15-year extraction project will touch a total of 450 km2,
    far less than 1% of the Chatham Rise.  Mr Clement estimates that's about
    seven times the size of Wellington harbour.
    "In contrast, over the same period fishing will bottom trawl 750,000 km2,
    about three times the size of New Zealand. Year after year, weighted nets
    scrape 50,000 km2 of seabed, with bottom-dwelling animals disturbed or
    destroyed.  Up to 3000 km2 of new territory is disturbed annually - an
    environmental impact 100 times greater than predicted for phosphate
    extraction."
    Mr Castle said Chatham has talked to the DWG for three years.
    "We've given them huge amounts of information, scientific reports and models
    showing temporary and very localised impacts on adjacent sea floor and water
    column. At their request we paid for an independent review of the modelling.
    They expressed cautious support for our project for most of that period.
    Recently the attitude of some members has changed, with no willingness to
    discuss their concerns.
    "We wouldn't consider extracting phosphate nodules from the Chatham Rise if
    it caused more than very minor environmental impacts."
    He said Chatham's operations simply lift the top 30cm of sandy silt and
    redeposit 85% of it carefully on the same seabed after extracting the nodules
    - the net effect is selected areas of seabed are lowered about 5cm. Modelling
    indicates the material returned will not be widely dispersed, and the
    sediment that doesn't immediately settle will rapidly dilute to insignificant
    levels.
    "Our draft environmental impact assessment (EIA), supported by 30-plus expert
    reports, has identified no long-term impacts on key spawning, juvenile and
    young fish habitat. Any potential impacts are confined to our limited
    extraction areas, and are short-term, reversible, and of low environmental
    risk. "
    He also notes the fundamentals of Chatham's proposed method are routinely
    used in dredging around the world.  The only new aspect is undertaking this
    work at 400m. The operations will be intermittent (3 days in every 10 day
    cycle) and spread among geographically separate locations within the licence
    area.
    "But while bottom trawling - ploughing vast tracts of the EEZ seabed decade
    after decade - requires no environmental consents, our project needs a mining
    licence and a marine consent. These cost millions of dollars, require years
    of research, consultation and official process, and involve full public
    scrutiny.
    "The annual fish trawl footprint on just the Chatham Rise during the 2009-10
    fishing year was 19,051 km2.  As hoki spawning and growth occurs over the
    entire 189,000 km2  Rise, DWG already know they can continually bottom-trawl
    10% of the area without harming juvenile fish stocks, so Chatham's extra
    annual 30 km2  is of little significance."
    Mr Castle said New Zealand is predicted to be $900 million richer as a result
    of the new phosphate industry and Chatham will be generating annual exports
    or import substitution of $300 million, plus supporting farming, our biggest
    earner.
    By area, the economic value of the phosphate resource is 500 times greater
    than fishing; expected to yield $9.1 million per km2. Bottom trawling yields
    less than $20,000 per km2.
    "The benthic protection areas, of which the fishing industry is so proud,
    were established to preserve areas of sea floor not already affected by
    bottom trawling. They were determined without considering the economic
    importance of resources such as rock phosphate.
    "Thanks partly to Chatham's $20 million investment, the Rise benthic
    environment is now one of the best known parts of our marine territory, and
    can now inform resource and environmental management decisions, possibly
    including modifying those benthic areas.
    "We've spent three years collecting data on oceanographic conditions (tides,
    currents, turbidity), benthic life, and analysing the impacts of disturbances
    on the seafloor and in the water column so we can minimise impacts and
    protect areas of benthic habitat."
    Mr Castle said this project is important to provide fertiliser security for
    farming.  Most rock phosphate used to make fertiliser now is imported from
    Morocco. It's high in cadmium, involves high transport costs and has a
    significant carbon footprint.
    Chatham Rise rock phosphate, as an ultra-low cadmium direct-application
    fertiliser, has proven to be as effective as processed fertilisers while
    reducing run-off effects on New Zealand waterways by up to 80%.
    Rather than being an "environmental catastrophe", it's a project of national
    significance offering significant economic and environmental benefits.
    
    For further information contact Chris Castle on 021 55 81 85 or email
    [email protected]
    End CA:00240601 For:CRP    Type:GENERAL    Time:2013-09-03 12:53:01
    				
 
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